AI Article Synopsis

  • Renal transplant patients require immunosuppressor therapy with cyclosporine (CsA) and anti-hypertensive calcium channel-blockers (CCBs) to manage T cell activity and counteract CsA's nephrotoxicity.
  • The combination of these medications can lead to gingival hypertrophy, particularly affecting the interdental papillae and the anterior maxillary region of the mouth.
  • Preventive therapy focuses on maintaining good oral hygiene, both professionally and at home, and considering alternative medications with fewer side effects.

Article Abstract

Patients who undergo a renal transplant also require a pharmacological immunosuppressor therapy with cyclosporine (CsA) as well as anti-hypertensive calcium channel-blockers (CCBs); the former suppresses interferon and interleukin-2 production thus interfering with T cell cell-mediated activity, while the latter are used in order to counteract the nephrotoxicity of CsA which causes the local release, of thromboxane A2 with vascular vasoconstriction in the kidney. The use of both these drugs, particularly if used in association, leads to the onset of a clinical picture of variable entity, characterized mainly by a hypertrophy originating usually at the level of interdental papillae, and more pronounced in the anterior maxillary areas and the vestibular surfaces of the teeth, in a more or less symptomatic manner. The therapy is above all preventive, with an appropriate oral hygiene program, both professionally as well as at home, and with the use of substitutive drugs that do not present such side effects.

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