Impaired oral health: a required companion of bacterial aspiration pneumonia

IF 1.3 Q3 REHABILITATION Frontiers in rehabilitation sciences Pub Date : 2024-06-04 DOI:10.3389/fresc.2024.1337920
John R. Ashford
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Abstract

Laryngotracheal aspiration has a widely-held reputation as a primary cause of lower respiratory infections, such as pneumonia, and is a major concern of care providers of the seriously ill orelderly frail patient. Laryngeal mechanical inefficiency resulting in aspiration into the lower respiratory tract, by itself, is not the cause of pneumonia. It is but one of several factors that must be present simultaneously for pneumonia to develop. Aspiration of oral and gastric contentsoccurs often in healthy people of all ages and without significant pulmonary consequences. Inthe seriously ill or elderly frail patient, higher concentrations of pathogens in the contents of theaspirate are the primary catalyst for pulmonary infection development if in an immunocompromised lower respiratory system. The oral cavity is a complex and ever changing eco-environment striving to maintain homogeneity among the numerous microbial communities inhabiting its surfaces. Poor maintenance of these surfaces to prevent infection can result inpathogenic changes to these microbial communities and, with subsequent proliferation, can altermicrobial communities in the tracheal and bronchial passages. Higher bacterial pathogen concentrations mixing with oral secretions, or with foods, when aspirated into an immunecompromised lower respiratory complex, may result in bacterial aspiration pneumonia development, or other respiratory or systemic diseases. A large volume of clinical evidence makes it clear that oral cleaning regimens, when used in caring for ill or frail patients in hospitals and long-term care facilities, drastically reduce the incidence of respiratory infection and death. The purpose of this narrative review is to examine oral health as a required causative companionin bacterial aspiration pneumonia development, and the effectiveness of oral infection control inthe prevention of this disease.
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口腔健康受损:细菌性吸入性肺炎的必要伴生物
喉气管吸入是导致肺炎等下呼吸道感染的主要原因,这一点广为人知,也是重症老年体弱患者的护理人员最关心的问题。喉部机械故障导致吸入下呼吸道本身并不是肺炎的原因。它只是导致肺炎的几个因素之一,这些因素必须同时存在。口腔和胃内容物的吸入经常发生在各个年龄段的健康人身上,而且不会对肺部造成严重后果。对于重症患者或年老体弱者,如果下呼吸系统免疫力低下,则吸入物中的病原体浓度较高,是导致肺部感染的主要催化剂。口腔是一个复杂且不断变化的生态环境,其表面栖息着众多微生物群落,它们努力保持着同质性。为防止感染而对这些表面进行的维护不当会导致这些微生物群落发生致病性变化,并随之增殖,从而改变气管和支气管通道中的微生物群落。与口腔分泌物或食物混合的细菌病原体浓度较高,当被吸入免疫力低下的下呼吸道时,可能会导致细菌性吸入性肺炎或其他呼吸道或全身性疾病。大量临床证据清楚地表明,在医院和长期护理机构护理病人或体弱病人时,使用口腔清洁方案可大大降低呼吸道感染和死亡的发生率。本综述旨在研究口腔健康作为细菌性吸入性肺炎的必要致病因素,以及口腔感染控制在预防该疾病方面的有效性。
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