Eikenella corrodens in Human Oral and Non‐Oral Infections: A Review

Abstract
There is substantial evidence in support of the existence of distinct clinical forms of human periodontal disease. Moreover, these different forms of periodontal disease may be associated with relatively distinct subgingival microflora, often involving microaerophilic or anaerobic Gram-negative bacterial species. Eikenella corrodens is a facultative Gram-negative bacillus which is a common inhabitant of the oral cavity and the intestinal and genital tracts. Its primary ecologic niche within the oral cavity appears to be dental plaque, both in periodontally healthy individuals and in periodontitis patients. However, E. corrodens is recognized as an infrequent human pathogen capable of causing extraoral infections, either as the sole infectious agent or as part of a mixed infection, its potential role in the etiology of periodontal disease is not well understood. E. corrodens is often present in the supra- and subgingival plaque of periodontally healthy subjects. On the basis of cross-sectional and longitudinal studies, E. corrodens appears to be somewhat more prevalent in subgingival plaque samples of periodontitis subjects than periodontally healthy individuals. However, the percentage of E. corrodens in the total cultivable microflora did not vary between the two groups. Microbiologic studies attempting to define the relationship between E. corrodens and periodontal disease assume that this species is essentially homogeneous and that all strains exhibit comparable pathogenic potential. However, E. corrodens exhibits 1) variable colony morphology, biochemical and serologic reactivity; 2) marked phenotypic diversity with respect to outer membrane protein and lipopolysaccharide structure; and 3) marked diversity in the restriction patterns of total genomic DNA. Thus, it is possible that a limited number of clones of E. corrodens may be associated with periodontal disease and/or extraoral infection, while other strains are relatively harmless commensals. Additional studies, possibly employing strain-specific nucleic acid probes, may be required to define the role of E. corrodens as a human periodontal pathogen.