RESUMO
BACKGROUND: There have been numerous reports evaluating clinical outcomes of implants placed in institutional settings, but there are few studies relating to implants placed in private practice. The aim of this retrospective study was to analyse the clinical outcomes of 1000 consecutively placed Straumann implants in private specialist periodontal practice. METHODS: A hand-search of patient records was undertaken to identify 1000 consecutively placed implants. Data extracted included patient demographics, details of implants placed, implant sites, timing of placement after extraction, hard and soft tissue augmentation procedures, loading protocols, type of prostheses and treatment outcomes (implant survival, implant success and complications). RESULTS: The majority of implants (71.5 per cent) placed in patients aged 40 to 69, and the majority of patients (88.6 per cent) received 1 or 2 implants. During the period of the study, 9 implants were lost and 45 presented with complications requiring chairside intervention. A life table analysis showed 5 and 10-year cumulative survival rates of 99.2 per cent and 98.4 per cent respectively, and 5 and 10-year cumulative success rates of 93.1 per cent and 90.9 per cent respectively. CONCLUSIONS: With careful treatment planning and adherence to recommended surgical and prosthetic protocols, high implant survival and success rates can be achieved in a private practice setting.
Assuntos
Implantes Dentários/estatística & dados numéricos , Restauração Dentária Permanente/estatística & dados numéricos , Adolescente , Adulto , Idoso , Idoso de 80 Anos ou mais , Implantação Dentária Endóssea/estatística & dados numéricos , Falha de Restauração Dentária , Feminino , Humanos , Arcada Edêntula/reabilitação , Estudos Longitudinais , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Avaliação de Resultados em Cuidados de Saúde , Prática Privada , Estudos Retrospectivos , Análise de Sobrevida , Adulto JovemRESUMO
Based on recent molecular systematics studies, the water lily lineage (Nymphaeales) provides an important key to understanding ancestral angiosperm morphology and is of considerable interest in the context of angiosperm origins. Therefore, the fossil record of Nymphaeales potentially provides evidence on both the timing and nature of diversification of one of the earliest clades of flowering plants. Recent fossil evidence of Turonian age (approximately 90 million years B.P.) includes fossil flowers with characters that, upon rigorous analysis, firmly place them within Nymphaeaceae. Unequivocally the oldest floral record of the Nymphaeales, these fossils are closely related to the modern Nymphaealean genera Victoria (the giant Amazon water lily) and Euryale. Although the fossils are much smaller than their modern relatives, the precise and dramatic correspondence between the fossil floral morphology and that of modern Victoria flowers suggests that beetle entrapment pollination was present in the earliest part of the Late Cretaceous.
Assuntos
Besouros/fisiologia , Flores/anatomia & histologia , Flores/fisiologia , Fósseis , Modelos Biológicos , Nymphaeaceae/fisiologia , Pólen/fisiologia , Animais , Flores/ultraestrutura , Microscopia Eletrônica de Varredura , New Jersey , Nymphaeaceae/anatomia & histologia , Nymphaeaceae/classificação , Nymphaeaceae/ultraestrutura , FilogeniaRESUMO
Fossilized pistillate inflorescences, fruits, and pollen grains from the Turonian (â¼90 million years before present) of New Jersey are described as a new genus, Microaltingia, in the family Hamamelidaceae. The fossils are remarkably preserved in exceptional detail. Several morphological and anatomical characters suggest affinities with Hamamelidaceae. These include capitate inflorescences, florets with a hypanthium, two-carpellate gynoecia, perigynous flowers, tricolpate reticulate pollen, a three-layered carpel wall, scalariform perforation plates with oblique end walls, and scalariform and opposite/alternate intervascular pitting. The gross morphology of pistillate inflorescences, unisexual flowers, phyllome structure, numerous ovules per carpel, and mode of carpel dehiscence indicate affinities with subfamily Altingioideae, which includes the modern genera Liquidambar and Altingia. Cladistic analysis using a previously published morphological matrix and scoring the fossil for available characters supports the position of the fossil as a sister taxon of modern Altingioideae. Although the fossil exhibits a mosaic of characters found within modern Hamamelidaceae, it is not identical to any modern taxon. Based on cladistic analysis, the fossil appears to be a basal "altingioid" that lacks the derived pollen found in extant Altingioideae and retains the more plesiomorphic tricolpate pollen found in the rest of Hamamelidaceae. The floral characters of the fossils, including phyllomes with stomata, short and straight styles, and small perprolate pollen grains, also indicate the possibility of insect pollination.
RESUMO
Phylogenetic analysis provides a rational basis for comparative studies of phloem structure and phloem loading. Although several types of minor vein companion cell have been identified, and progress has been made in correlating structural features of these cells with loading mechanisms, little is known about the phylogenetic relationships of the different types. To add to the available data on companion cells, we analyzed the ultrastructure of minor veins in Euonymus fortunei and Celastrus orbiculatis (Celastraceae) leaves and determined that in these species they are specialized as intermediary cells. This cell type has been implicated in symplastic phloem loading. The data were added to published data sets on minor vein phloem characteristics, which were then mapped to a well-supported molecular tree. The analysis indicates that extensive plasmodesmatal continuity between minor vein phloem and surrounding cells is ancestral in the angiosperms. Reduction in plasmodesmatal frequency at this interface is a general evolutionary trend, punctuated by instances of the reverse. This is especially true in the case of intermediary cells that have many plasmodesmata, but other distinguishing characteristics as well, and have arisen independently at least four, and probably six, times in derived lineages. The character of highly reduced plasmodesmatal frequency in minor vein phloem, common in crop plants, has several points of origin in the tree. Thus, caution should be exercised in generalizing results on apoplastic phloem loading obtained from model species. Transfer cells have many independent points of origin, not always from lineages with reduced plasmodesmatal frequency.
RESUMO
In this paper, we propose a new method (uninode coding) for coding duplicate (paralogous) genes to infer species trees. Uninode coding incorporates data from duplicated and unduplicated gene copies in phylogenetic analyses of taxa. Uninode coding utilizes global parsimony through the inclusion of both duplicated and unduplicated gene copies, allows one to code all data sources from a taxon into a single terminal, and overcomes problems of character dependence among duplicated and unduplicated gene copies. We present an example of uninode coding using the phytochrome A and phytochrome C data from a study by Donoghue and Mathews.
Assuntos
Proteínas de Arabidopsis , Duplicação Gênica , Filogenia , Plantas/genética , Algoritmos , Apoproteínas/genética , Evolução Molecular , Fitocromo/genética , Fitocromo A , Proteínas de Plantas/genéticaRESUMO
Quercus is one of the most abundant and economically important genera of woody plants in the Northern Hemisphere. To infer phylogenetic relationships within Quercus subgenus Quercus, chloroplast DNA (cpDNA) restriction sites and nucleotide sequences of the internal transcribed spacers (ITS) and the 5.8S coding region of the nuclear ribosomal DNA repeat were obtained for 44 individuals, including 25 species, intraspecific samples, and three outgroups. Separate parsimony analyses of each data set showed that individual gene trees were congruent and often complementary in supporting clades that generally corresponded to previously recognized taxonomic groups. Only one instance of strongly supported gene tree incongruence was detected and this anomalous pattern was explained best by ancient introgression of cpDNA across sectional boundaries. Simultaneous parsimony analysis of the pruned data sets supported the recognition of the strictly Eurasian section Cerris and resolved a novel hypothesis for the major infrageneric groups (Cerris- (Lobatae- (Protobalanus + Quercus sensu stricto))). The biogeographic hypothesis that all major oak lineages evolved locally at middle latitudes within the general distribution of their fossil ancestors was fully supported. This set of relationships also suggested a New World origin for the widespread white oaks of the Northern Hemisphere (section Quercus s. s.). For both data sets, inter- and intraspecific sampling within section Protobalanus showed little correspondence to morphological species. Greater cladistic structure among the samples was obtained by cpDNA restriction sites and two well-delimited plastomes types comprising a total of 15 distinct haplotypes were resolved. Haplotypes of 2 of the peripheral species in this species complex occupy terminal portions of one of the plastome clades, suggesting a more recent origin relative to those of more widespread species. The phylogeography of the two divergent plastome types suggested a north-south pattern, consistent with a Late Tertiary disjunction in the ancestral distribution of section Protobalanus.
Assuntos
Filogenia , Árvores/genética , Núcleo Celular/genética , Enzimas de Restrição do DNA/metabolismo , DNA de Cloroplastos/genética , DNA de Cloroplastos/metabolismo , DNA de Plantas/química , DNA de Plantas/genética , DNA Ribossômico/genética , Geografia , Dados de Sequência Molecular , RNA Ribossômico 5,8S/genética , Alinhamento de Sequência , Análise de Sequência de DNA , Árvores/classificaçãoRESUMO
The genetic structure of 11 populations of Culex tarsalis Coquillett from California and 1 population from Nevada was examined at 18 loci using polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Six populations from northern and southern California were sampled repeatedly to determine if the genetic structure of Cx. tarsalis changes seasonally. Significant differences in allele frequencies at 13 different loci were seen in 3 populations over time as determined by contingency chi-square tests. Nei's genetic distance coefficients among different sampling dates was consistently < 0.025. The number of alleles per locus in these populations ranged from 1.6 to 2.7, whereas the average heterozygosity ranged from 0.086 to 0.228. No single locus was found to vary in a consistent pattern within all populations that were sampled repeatedly. These results indicate that Cx. tarsalis populations are genetically stable over time and that temporal variation is due to fluctuations in population size or immigration of genetically distinct individuals. In contrast, Cx. tarsalis did exhibit some differences in genetic structure that were related to geographical features including the Sierra Nevada and the Tehachapi Mountains of southern California. Genetically differentiated populations occurred in Nevada, southern and northeastern California, and the Central Valley of California. Little differentiation was observed among populations located in the Central Valley of California and those located at high elevations in the Sierra Nevada. Thus, in the populations examined, mountain ranges or arid conditions that limit the number of larval development sites appeared to be important barriers to the dispersal of Cx. tarsalis.
Assuntos
Culex/genética , Variação Genética , Animais , California , Culex/classificaçãoRESUMO
Maps of the California and Oregon distribution of members of the Aedes increpitus complex (Aedes clivis Lanzaro and Eldridge, Aedes increpitus Dyar, and Aedes washinoi Lanzaro and Eldridge) are presented that are based on collections reported by Lanzaro and Eldridge (1992) and new collections from various sites, many in the Central Valley of California. Analysis of individually reared specimens by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and conventional morphological methods confirmed the diagnostic value of isozymes for these species and of larval head hairs for distinguishing Ae. clivis from other members of the complex. Other larval characters and pupal hairs did not appear to have diagnostic value. An additional site was discovered where apparent hybrids between Ae. washinoi and Ae. increpitus occur, and a single possible hybrid between Ae. washinoi and Ae. clivis was found at a site where these species had previously been reported to occur sympatrically.
Assuntos
Aedes , Animais , California , OregonRESUMO
Two taxa of cupulate magnoliid fossil flowers, Cronquistiflora and Detrusandra, are described from the Late Cretaceous (Turonian, â¼90 million years before present [MYBP]) Raritan (or lower Magothy) Formation of New Jersey. The fossil taxa are represented by flowers at various stages of development, associated fragments of cup-shaped floral receptacles with attached anthers, and isolated anthers. Both taxa have laminar stamens with adaxial thecae and valvate dehiscence. Pollen is boat-shaped and foveolate in anthers associated with Cronquistiflora and spherical with reticulate ornamentation in Detrusandra. Cup-shaped receptacles are externally bracteose in both taxa. The receptacle of Cronquistiflora is broader than the campanulate one of Detrusandra. Cronquistiflora also has more carpels (â¼50 in a spiral vs. â¼5 in a whorl or tight spiral). In Detrusandra the carpels are surrounded by dorsiventrally flattened structures (pistillodes?) that are remote from the attachment of the stamens near the distal rim of the receptacular cupule. Detrusandra stigmas are rounded and bilobed, while those of Cronquistiflora, although bilateral in symmetry, are somewhat peltate. The fossil taxa share prominent characters with extant cupulate magnoliids (e.g., Eupomatia, Calycanthus), but also share characters with other magnoliids including Winteraceae. These fossils represent taxa that are character mosaics relative to currently recognized families. Inclusion of these fossils in existing data matrices and ensuing phylogenetic analyses effect changes in tree topologies consistent with their mosaicism relative to modern taxa. But such analyses do not definitively demonstrate the affinities of the fossils other than illustrating that these fossils are generalized magnoliids. Additional analysis of modern and fossil magnoliids is necessary to fully appreciate the phylogenetic significance and positions of these fossil taxa. However, the results of the phylogenetic analyses do introduce the possibility that extinct taxa of Magnoliales with cupulate floral receptacles were transitional between basal angiosperms and those with tricolpate pollen. The fossils provide insights into the timing of evolution of character complexes now associated with coleopteran pollination.
RESUMO
Exceptionally well-preserved staminate inflorescences, pistillate inflorescences, and detached stamens with important phylogenetic and paleoecological implications have been discovered from the Turonian (ca. 88.5-90.4 million years B.P.) Raritan Formation of New Jersey. The fossils have a combination of floral and pollen characters found in various genera of modern entomophilous and anemophilous Hamamelidaceae and anemophilous Platanus (Platanaceae). The floral characters of the fossils, including a sepal cup, staminal tube, and apparently nectariferous staminodes, indicate that this taxon was probably insect pollinated. The juxtaposition of character complexes in an extinct taxon from disparate modern taxa provides an interesting phylogenetic perspective on the origins of Hamamelidaceae and is a striking example of a fossil that is a mosaic of familial level characters relative to modern taxa. Of even broader interest, however, is the occurrence of staminodal nectaries that have structural characters intermediate between the fossil's functional stamens and modern hamamelidaceous petals. This transitional staminode morphology in the context of the other fossil characters suggests a staminodal origin of petals in the hamamelid-rosid lineage. This hypothesis is supported by the apparent staminode position within the fossil flowers where petals are found in modern genera. The character complex of morphologically transitional staminodes, a staminal tube, and sepal cup can be viewed as prehypanthial, lacking only fusion of the staminal tube to the sepal cup. The appearance of the character complex embodied in these flowers during the late mid-Cretaceous may signal the early stages of the relationship between specialized pollinators, such as bees, and the hamamelid-rosid-asterid lineage of angiosperms, arguably one of the most important events in angiosperm radiation.
RESUMO
All new patients commencing supportive periodontal therapy (periodontal maintenance) after treatment in a specialist periodontal practice from 1983 to 1986 were identified from practice records. Based on their compliance with the recommended schedule of visits, the patients were classified as either compliant or non-compliant. The results indicated that there were no significant differences between compliant and non-compliant patients with regards to age, sex, number of missing teeth, plaque score, or periodontal disease severity. More non-compliant patients than compliant patients were smokers (P less than 0.05). By contrast, more compliant patients were covered by private dental insurance (P less than 0.01) and more had periodontal surgery during treatment (P less than 0.001). Only 36% of the initial patient sample was found to be compliant at the end of 1989, with the greatest patient loss in the first year of supportive periodontal therapy of about 42%. The annual attrition rate decreased in subsequent years to average about 10% of those remaining in each year, indicating that a patient is more likely to remain compliant if he or she attends for at least 1 year of supportive periodontal treatment. Non-compliant patients were sent a questionnaire seeking reasons for their non-compliance. Forty percent of the questionnaires were returned. The most common reason given for non-compliance was that a general dental practitioner was attending to the patient's periodontal treatment needs. Many considered supportive periodontal therapy to be too expensive, while a significant proportion considered that they no longer required treatment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Assuntos
Cooperação do Paciente , Doenças Periodontais/terapia , Adulto , Idoso , Agendamento de Consultas , Atitude Frente a Saúde , Custos e Análise de Custo , Assistência Odontológica , Feminino , Humanos , Seguro Odontológico , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Doenças Periodontais/economia , Doenças Periodontais/psicologia , Doenças Periodontais/cirurgia , FumarRESUMO
Thirty-four patients with periodontal disease each had subgingival plaque samples collected from four sites (one from each quadrant) in their mouths. The relative proportions of spirochaetes, motile rods and cocci were determined using dark field microscopy and the proportion of anaerobic to aerobic microorganisms was calculated after culture. In addition, clinical recordings were made at these sampled sites. The patients then underwent a course of periodontal treatment and were placed on a maintenance programme. The clinical recordings were repeated and the results examined to ascertain if the original microbiological or clinical measurements could have been used to predict the response to therapy. Of the baseline recordings, the initial probing depth, the initial attachment level and the presence of suppuration all showed a positive correlation with the degree of pocket reduction or attachment gain produced by treatment. The percentage of cocci in the subgingival plaque correlated negatively with the treatment response. Suppuration seemed to be associated primarily with the original pocket depth while the percentage of cocci in subgingival plaque showed a true relationship with the amount of attachment gained after periodontal therapy. The significance of this finding is discussed.
Assuntos
Bactérias/isolamento & purificação , Placa Dentária/microbiologia , Doenças Periodontais/terapia , Adulto , Análise de Variância , Bactérias/classificação , Bactérias Aeróbias/isolamento & purificação , Bactérias Anaeróbias/isolamento & purificação , Humanos , Doenças Periodontais/microbiologia , Bolsa Periodontal/patologia , Bolsa Periodontal/terapia , Probabilidade , Spirochaetales/isolamento & purificação , Fatores de TempoRESUMO
Ninety-five patients with periodontal disease each had subgingival plaque samples collected from four sites (one from each quadrant) in their mouths. The relative proportions of spirochaetes, motile rods and cocci were determined using dark field microscopy and the proportion of anaerobic to aerobic micro-organisms calculated after culture. In addition, clinical recordings were made. The only significant correlations observed were between probing depth or attachment loss and the proportion of cocci in the plaque (negative association), probing depth or attachment loss and sites which were suppurating or displayed a radiolucent interdental crest (positive association), and the percentage of cocci and sites with a radiolucent interdental crest (negative association). Partial correlation analysis controlling for probing depth or attachment loss showed that a significant inverse association between the percentages of cocci and the presence of a radiolucent interdental crest remained. No significant associations were observed between clinical signs such as bleeding on probing or suppuration and the microbiological assays. Overall there was a poor correlation between many of the signs thought by some to indicate periodontal disease activity.
Assuntos
Bactérias/isolamento & purificação , Placa Dentária/microbiologia , Doenças Periodontais/patologia , Adulto , Bactérias Aeróbias/isolamento & purificação , Bactérias Anaeróbias/isolamento & purificação , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Microscopia/métodos , Doenças Periodontais/imunologia , Spirochaetales/isolamento & purificaçãoRESUMO
For the materials and time period used in this study it was found that: 1. At the end of the study there were no significant differences recorded between the restored teeth with either the gingival index or the histologic inflammation index. 2. The gingival index showed that during the study the overall gingival health of the control teeth had improved significantly, while the overall gingival health of the restored teeth had improved only slightly. 3. At the end of the study the histologic inflammation index, but not the gingival index, showed significantly more gingivitis overall for the restored teeth than for the control teeth. 4. A comparison of the gingival, histologic inflammation, and microorganism (from Part I) indices, used to assess either the gingival condition or the amount of subgingival plaque on the restored teeth, showed no association between any of them. 5. In general, the degree of clinical and histologic gingivitis associated with the restored teeth was slight.
Assuntos
Materiais Dentários , Restauração Dentária Permanente , Gengivite/etiologia , Resinas Acrílicas , Silicatos de Alumínio , Animais , Resinas Compostas , Amálgama Dentário , Cimentos Dentários , Placa Dentária/etiologia , Cães , Feminino , Gengiva/anatomia & histologia , Gengivite/patologia , Índice Periodontal , Propriedades de SuperfícieAssuntos
Materiais Dentários , Placa Dentária/etiologia , Restauração Dentária Permanente , Resinas Acrílicas , Silicatos de Alumínio , Animais , Bactérias/citologia , Resinas Compostas , Cobre , Amálgama Dentário , Cimentos Dentários , Placa Dentária/microbiologia , Placa Dentária/ultraestrutura , Cães , Feminino , Gengiva/anatomia & histologia , Gengiva/microbiologia , Propriedades de Superfície , Escovação DentáriaRESUMO
A study using a method of questioning regarding the interdental cleaning habits of 766 patients in the Periodontics Department of the Brisbane Dental Hospital revealed: 1. Only 11.5 percent used an interdental aid once or more daily. 2. Only 14.3 percent of those who had received regular dental treatment used an aid at least once daily. 3. Thirty percent of patients who had received regular dental treatment had received some instruction in the use of interdental aids. 4. Significantly more patients receiving periodontal treatment used an aid once daily. 5. There was no difference between institutional and private practice patients in the use of an aid, but more of the last named continued to follow instructions in their use. 6. Significantly more daily users of woodsticks than of dental floss were found. These findings demonstrate a major defect in dental health communication in the sample studied which is probably reflected in a more widespread fashion in a broad cross section of the population.
Assuntos
Higiene Bucal/métodos , Assistência Odontológica , Dispositivos para o Cuidado Bucal Domiciliar , Placa Dentária/terapia , Feminino , Odontologia Geral , Humanos , Prática Institucional , Masculino , Higiene Bucal/instrumentação , Doenças Periodontais/terapia , Periodontia , Prática PrivadaRESUMO
This report describes a localized painful gingiva in the region of the incisive papilla of 5 years duration in a 68-year-old Caucasian woman. Clinical examination revealed no recognizable lesion. The histological observations showed a relatively large number of free nerve endings within the epithelium and the lamina propria. Excision of the painful area relieved the symptoms.