Supportive periodontal care is an essential component of maintaining the outcome of periodontal treatment. It is essential to ensure cost benefit to both patients and the health services where millions are spent on treating patients with periodontal disease. The dentist must be able to recognise the crucial and important role they play in providing supportive care and therapy to periodontally compromised patients, either independently or as part of a wider dental team, over and above the various challenges they may experience in the provision of such care in general dental practice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground Supportive periodontal care (SPC) is important in maintaining periodontal treatment outcomes. Hospital services provide specialist periodontal care at high costs. On completion of treatment, patients are discharged back to the general dental practitioner (GDP) to provide SPC.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic resulted in an unprecedented shut down of all elective dental services, with normal training activity being suspended. This questionnaire-based survey reports on the experiences of a cohort of dental trainees who participated in redeployment during the pandemic.Materials and methods The questionnaires were distributed via Survey Monkey to 47 trainees, before and eight weeks after redeployment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe term 'crown lengthening surgery' refers to a variety of techniques which aim to expose a greater amount of tooth structure around a tooth or group of teeth. The decision to treat and which technique to use will depend upon: the underlying aetiology; a thorough history and examination; results of any supporting investigations and a clear understanding of the intended outcome of treatment. This paper aims to provide an overview of crown lengthening surgery and is illustrated with clinical cases.
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