Background: The use of locally delivered antibacterials containing chlorhexidine (CHX) was proposed to improve the effectiveness of non-surgical periodontal treatment. The present multicenter randomized study investigated the effects of a xanthan-based chlorhexidine (Xan-CHX) gel used as an adjunct to scaling and root planing (SRP) in the treatment of chronic periodontitis.
Methods: Ninety-eight systemically healthy subjects with moderate to advanced periodontitis were recruited in four centers (59 females and 39 males; aged 24 to 58 years).
The main therapeutic approaches for inflammatory periodontal diseases include the mechanical treatment of root surfaces. Multi-center clinical trials have demonstrated that the adjunctive use of a chlorhexidine (CHX) chip is effective in improving clinical results compared to scaling and root planing (SRP) alone. However, some recent studies failed to confirm these clinical results, nor have any data been reported regarding the capability of the CHX chip in affecting the activity of alkaline phosphatase (ALP) in the gingival crevicular fluid (GCF).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The main therapeutic approach for periodontal diseases is mechanical treatment of root surfaces via scaling and root planing (SRP). Multicenter clinical trials have demonstrated that the adjunctive use of a chlorhexidine (CHX) chip is effective in improving clinical results compared to SRP alone. However, some recent studies failed to confirm these clinical results, and conflicting results were reported regarding the effects of the CHX chip on subgingival microflora.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: During orthodontic treatment, changes in subgingival plaque colonization and tissue inflammation and remodelling have been described. This study uses a longitudinal design to examine subgingival colonization of Actinobacillus actinomycetemcomitans (Aa) and alkaline phosphatase (ALP) and aspartate aminotransferase (AST) activities in gingival crevicular fluid (GCF) in order to assess whether these parameters have potential as biomarkers of tissue responses to orthodontic tooth movement in humans.
Materials & Methods: Twenty-one patients (ages: 11.
Background: During orthodontic tooth movement, the early response of periodontal tissues to mechanical stress involves an acute inflammatory response, with a sequence characterized by periods of activation, resorption, reversal, and formation in both tension and compression sites. This study used a longitudinal design to examine aspartate aminotransferase (AST) activity in gingival crevicular fluid (GCF) in order to assess whether AST in GCF has potential as a possible diagnostic aid to monitor tooth movement and tissue response during orthodontic treatment.
Methods: Eighteen patients (mean age, 16.
Background: Many surgical techniques have been proposed for the correction of dental root exposition. Among these, bilaminar techniques (BTs) have been reported as offering the best results in terms of root coverage (RC). However, BTs require a second surgical site to harvest the graft, with discomfort for the patient.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Orthod Dentofacial Orthop
November 2002
Bone remodeling that occurs during orthodontic tooth movement is a biologic process involving an acute inflammatory response in periodontal tissues. A sequence characterized by periods of activation, resorption, reversal, and formation has been recently described as occurring in both tension and compression tooth sites during orthodontic tooth movement. We used a longitudinal design to investigate alkaline phosphatase (ALP) activity in gingival crevicular fluid (GCF) to assess whether it can serve as a diagnostic aid in orthodontics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Early implantation may preserve the alveolar anatomy, and the placement of a fixture in a fresh extraction socket helps to maintain the bony crest. Although a number of clinical studies exist, no histological reports show the outcome of implantation in fresh extraction sockets without the use of membranes in humans compared to implants placed in mature bone.
Methods: Forty-eight healthy patients, receiving at least 4 fixtures in each of 2 symmetrical quadrants, underwent placement of 1 experimental fixture placed in a fresh extraction socket (TI) and 1 contralateral fixture in mature bone (CI).
Int J Periodontics Restorative Dent
October 2001
The authors report the clinical and histologic data on the healing of a severe periodontal lesion obtained in a one-walled intrabony defect using anorganic bovine bone under a bovine peritoneum-derived collagen membrane. Eight months after surgery, a bone-like tissue replaced the lost tissues. A biopsy of this tissue was carried out.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: In the present study, the effectiveness of root planing has been compared to the excisional new attachment procedure (ENAP) during the etiological phase of periodontal therapy, after the supragingival scaling, in order to establish if a technique offering an easy access to the subgingival areas could reduce the need for a surgical phase in the periodontal treatment.
Methods: Twenty-seven patients, affected by moderate periodontitis, participated in this study; in each of them root planing was performed in a half of the oral cavity (control site) and the ENAP in the other half (test site). The main clinical parameters of periodontal health (probing depth--PD-, attachment loss--AL-, plaque index--PlI- and gingival index--GI-) were evaluated before and 1, 2 and 6 months after the periodontal treatment.
As observed in previous case reports, dental rubber dam (DRD) can be utilized as a barrier membrane in the guided tissue regeneration (GTR) technique for the treatment of periodontal intrabony defects. The purpose of the present study was (1) to confirm the validity of DRD as a suitable material in regenerative procedures and (2) to compare, in a split-mouth clinical trial, the effectiveness of DRD-made membranes in the treatment of periodontal intrabony defects versus that of expanded polytetrafluoroethylene (e-PTFE) barriers. 22 systemically healthy non-smoker adult periodontitis patients (7 male, 15 female) aged between 35 to 58 years were selected for the study.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe principal aspects of the hyperplastic pathology which frequently appears during pregnancy with a particular regard to the etiopathogenetic hypotheses are presented. The etiopathogenesis of the so-called pregnancy granuloma is rather complex, because in addition to the common irritant factors like bacterial plaque and calculus it is necessary to recognize the influence that hormonal modifications in pregnancy have on the predisposition to the development of gingival lesions. The hormonal influence acts by an intense inflammatory response and by a selective growth of some periodontal-pathogen and aggressive microbes, like Prevotella intermedia, whose increase in the subgingival plaque from the 3 degrees-4 degrees month of pregnancy coincide with the beginning of hyperplastic lesions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The guided regeneration of periodontal tissues demonstrated to represent a therapeutical technique with predictable results. It has been observed that different materials, used as regenerative membranes, offer very similar results. Unconventional materials too, like the rubber dam, seem to be useful in the guided tissues regeneration technique.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe principal aspects of the hyperplastic pathology which frequently appears during pregnancy and its epidemiological and clinical aspects are discussed. The existence of a particular kind of gingivitis, typical in pregnancy, not different from that appearing in not-pregnant women, let to hypothesize the existence of a relationship between the gingival lesion and the particular hormonal condition observed in pregnancy. Sometimes pregnancy gingivitis can show a tendency towards localized hyperplasia, this condition is defined pregnancy granuloma.
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