The safety and efficacy of a degradable, subgingivally placed drug delivery system containing 2.5 mg chlorhexidine (CHX) were evaluated in a randomized, blinded, multi-center study of 118 patients with moderate periodontitis. A split-mouth design was used to compare the treatment outcomes of scaling and root planing (SRP) alone with the combined use of SRP and the CHX in pockets with probing depths of 5 to 8 mm. The two maxillary quadrants were used for the two treatment arms of the study. Scaling and root planing was performed at baseline only, while the CHX was inserted both at baseline and at 3 months. Clinical and safety measurements including probing depth (PD), clinical attachment level (CAL), and bleeding on probing (BOP) as well as gingivitis, plaque, and staining indices were recorded at baseline, and at 1, 3, and 6 months. The average PD reduction in the CHX-treated sites was significantly greater than in the sites receiving SRP alone at both 3 and 6 months with a mean difference of 0.42 mm (P < or = 0.01) at 6 months. The reduction in CAL at the treated sites was greater than at the SRP sites, although the difference was statistically significant at the 6-month visit only. An analysis of patients with initial probing depths of 7 to 8 mm (n = 56) revealed a significantly greater reduction in PD and CAL in those pockets treated with CHX compared to SRP at both 3 and 6 months. The mean differences between test and control sites at 6 months were 0.71 mm and 0.56 mm PD and CAL respectively.
Recent demonstrations of the superficial nature and ease of removal of root-surface-associated cytotoxic materials suggest that extensive root-surface instrumentation is not warranted clinically. This in vitro investigation determined the detoxifying effects of a conservative regime of ultrasonic root debridement, using the Limulus amoebocyte lysate assay for lipopolysaccharide (LPS) as an indication of the presence or absence of cytotoxic materials. 20 extracted periodontally-involved single-rooted teeth, with no clinically detectable calculus deposits, were debrided with a Cavitron TF-10 tip. Light pressure, resulting from a force application of approximately 50 g, lasting for 0.8 s/mm2 of root surface was used and complete overlapping instrumentation ensured. The finding of LPS levels of less than 2.5 ng per root in 19 out of 20 teeth after such debridement was comparable to LPS levels found on healthy, uninvolved control teeth, and thus endorses the growing belief that root surface cleanliness can be readily achieved.
Children in the London Boroughs of Kensington, Chelsea and Westminster have one of the highest levels of caries in England and Wales. In 1997/98, the mean dmft for 5-year-old children was 2.83 with only 45.9% of the children being caries free. The aim of this study was to determine whether teacher-supervised toothbrushing, once a day, at school, during term time, with commercial toothpaste containing 1,450 ppm fluoride, could reduce dental caries in primary school children when compared with children from the same community who did not receive this intervention. A total of 517 children (mean age 5.63 years) were recruited for the study. Class teachers were trained individually by the same dental hygienist in an appropriate toothbrushing technique for young children. Children in the intervention group brushed once a day at school. All examinations were by visual assessment only. All teeth present were assessed using the BASCD criteria. For children in the intervention group, the overall caries increment (2.60) was significantly less (10.9%; p < 0.001) than for children in the non-intervention group (2.92). Among different tooth surfaces, the difference in caries increment between the intervention group (0.78) and the non-intervention group (1.03) was greatest for the proximal surfaces (21.4%; p < 0.01). In conclusion, this study suggests that a programme of daily teacher-supervised toothbrushing with fluoride toothpaste can be effectively targeted into socially deprived communities and a significant reduction in dental caries can thereby be achieved especially among caries-susceptible children.
At the end of the study, the mean reductions for PPD were 1.0 mm (SRP) compared to 1.5 mm (SRP+gel), and for CAL they were 0.4 mm (SRP) compared to 0.8 mm (SRP+gel), with mean difference for CAL between treatments of 0.4 +/- 0.6 mm (95% confidence intervals of 0.3-0.6 mm). The combination therapy of SRP+gel was superior to the conventional treatment of SRP alone, and these differences were maintained for 9 months.
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