Hadar Ben Zaken’s research while affiliated with Hebrew University of Jerusalem and other places

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Publications (2)


Isolation and Characterization of anti-Streptococcus Mutans Phage as a Possible Treatment Agent for Caries
  • Preprint

March 2021

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62 Reads

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7 Citations

Hadar Ben Zaken

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Reut Kraitman

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Shunit Coppenhagen-Glazer

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[...]

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Ronen Hazan

Streptococcus mutans is a key bacterium in dental caries- one of the most prevalent chronic infectious diseases. Conventional treatment both fails to specifically target the pathogenic bacteria and at-tempts to eradicate commensal bacteria as well. Thus, caries remains one of most common and challenging diseases. The use of bacterial viruses as anti-bacterial agents, is gaining interest worldwide. Hardly any phages were described against S. mutans. The objective of this study was to isolate anti-S. mutans phages and to characterize their antimi-crobial properties. Human saliva samples were filtered and screened for potential phages. Standard double-layered agar method was used for isolation. Whole genome sequence analysis and morphology visualization by TEM, were used for anti-S. mutans phage identification. Antibacterial properties were evaluated using clinical strains and ATCC strains of S. mutans in various states. Antibacterial effect was also tested on human cariogenic dentin. One phage against S. mutans was isolated and termed SMHBZ8. This phage showed effective lytic activity in vitro against both planktonic and biofilm S. mutans cultures. Moreover, the phage showed antibacterial effect when used on cariogenic dentin. The isolation and characterization of SMHBZ8 may be the first step in developing a potential phage therapy for dental caries.


Figure 1. Flowchart depicting the selection process for included studies.
Figure 2. Cont.
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Variety of Surgical Guides and Protocols for Bone Reduction Prior to Implant Placement: A Narrative Review
  • Literature Review
  • Full-text available

February 2021

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1,013 Reads

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30 Citations

Edentulism and terminal dentition are still considered significant problems in the dental field, posing a great challenge for surgical and restorative solutions especially with immediate loading protocols. When the implant placement is planned immediately after extraction with irregular bone topography or there is an un-leveled alveolar ridge topography for any other reason, bone reduction may be required to level the alveolar crest in order to create the desired bone architecture allowing for sufficient bone width for implant placement and to insure adequate inter-arch restorative space. Bone reduction protocols exist in analog and digitally planned methodologies, with or without surgical guides to achieve the desired bone level based upon the desired position of the implants with regard to the restorative outcome. The objective of this paper was to scrutinize the literature regarding the practice of bone reduction in conjunction with implant placement, and to review different types of bone reduction surgical guides. Results: The literature reveals different protocols that provide for bone reduction with a variety of bone reduction methods. The digitally-planned surgical guide based on Cone-Beam computerized tomography (CBCT) scan reconstructed data can improve accuracy, reduce surgical time, and deliver the desired bone level for the implant placement with fewer surgical and restorative complications. The clinician’s choice is based on personal experience, training, and comfort with a specific guide type. Conclusions: Bone reduction, when required, is an indispensable step in the surgical procedure to attain suitable width of bone in anticipation of implant placement ideally determined by the desired tooth position and required restorative space based on material selection for the chosen framework design, i.e., hybrid, monolithic zirconia. Additionally, bone reduction and implant placement can be accomplished in the same surgical procedure, minimizing trauma and the need for two separate interventions

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Citations (2)


... The four S. mutans infecting phage that S. mutans has acquired spacer immunity against are known as M102, M102AD, ɸAPCM01 and smHBZ8 (Delisle and Rostkowski, 1993;Delisle et al., 2012;Dalmasso et al., 2015;Zaken et al., 2021). These are the only S. mutans phage that have been genome sequenced and all belong to the Siphoviridae family of doublestranded DNA viruses; they are lytic phage. ...

Reference:

Investigating CRISPR spacer targets and their impact on genomic diversification of Streptococcus mutans
Isolation and Characterization of anti-Streptococcus Mutans Phage as a Possible Treatment Agent for Caries
  • Citing Preprint
  • March 2021

... For senior people, getting used to replacement dentures can be a constant challenge, especially when significant adjustments are needed to the fitting as well as occlusal denture surfaces (1,3) . The most challenging patients are those who have systemic diseases like Parkinson's, dementia, and physical frailty. ...

Variety of Surgical Guides and Protocols for Bone Reduction Prior to Implant Placement: A Narrative Review