Pain Relief Caused by Placing Orthodontic Separators Clinical Trial
Official title:
Effect of a Double Dose of Photobiomodulaton Therapy on Orthodonthic Pain Caused by Elastomeric Separators
It has been reported that 90% of the patients experience pain during orthodontic treat-ment.
The purpose of this study was to compare the effect of a double dose of photobio-modulation
(PBM) therapy on pain perception in patients having fixed appliance treat-ment.
Twenty-two patients were recruited to participate in this single-blinded, place-bo-controlled
study. Four elastomeric separators were placed, mesially and distally to the upper first
molar on each side. The right side of the upper jaw was treated with low-power diode laser,
and the left side was a placebo, same treatment with laser switched off. Two doses of PBM
therapy (660nm, 90mW) were delivered 24 hours apart. The par-ticipants filled out the
questionnaire immediately after the placement of separators and before 1st laser treatment
(TO), 12 hours (T1), 24 hours (T2), 2 days (T3) and 3 days after the 1st treatment (T4). At
each evaluation period, the degree of pain was scored twice, one for each side.
Placing elastomeric separators is a part of the orthodontic treatment to create space for the
orthodontic bands. This initial tooth displacement induces pain and instant release
bio-chemical mediators such as prostaglandin-E2, substance P and interleukin 1-beta.
It has been reported that 90% of the patients experience pain in at least one part of the
orthodontic treatment. Pain starts two hours after application of orthodontic fixed
appliance, raises over the next 24-36 hours, starts to decrease on day 3, and disappears
within 6-7 days.There are two principal groups of methods for controlling orthodontic pain:
pharmacolog-ical and non-pharmacological.
Laser photobiomodulation (PBM), also called low-level laser therapy (LLLT), is the
ap-plication of the light to pathology to encourage tissue regeneration, decrease
inflammation and relieving pain. The wavelength used for this purpose is in the red and
infrared spectrum (600-1000nm). There is no complete understanding of the mechanisms behind
PBM, however enormous upturn has been done in this part. PBM has an impact on molecular,
cellular and tissue level.
Past studies in this field have demonstrated the opposite outcomes of PBM therapy on
relieving the pain after the insertion of orthodontic separators. Part of the researches
showed a positive effect in pain reduction and some presented no effect. The studies with
positive outcomes have no consistent specification such as wavelength, dose, radiant
exposure, irradiance, tip diameter, average power output, peak power (for gated mode), time,
or position of the points of application.
Thus, the purpose of this study was to evaluate the efficiency of low-level diode laser in
decreasing the level of pain at the beginning of an orthodontic treatment caused by
elas-tomeric separators. The null hypothesis for this study was that no difference existed
among laser-treated and placebo side in reducing pain caused by elastomeric separators.
Materials and methods Study design This is a single-blinded, placebo-controlled, split-mouth
study. The design of this study was split-mouth to eliminate all components related to
differences among subjects. The study was carried out at Department of Orthodontics,
University Dental Clinic, Clinical Hospital Center Rijeka. Ethical approval was obtained from
the Ethical Committee of the Clinical Hospital Center of Rijeka, Croatia (003-05/2/-1-/22,
2170-29-02/1-20-2).
Sample size The sample size was decided by the Power analysis (G*power 3.1.) based on the
results from the previous study [29] and predicting study power of 0.95 and a significance
level of 0.05. The program calculated the sample size of at least 22 participants.
Participants and inclusion criteria The sample included 22 participants (12 females and 10
males) Procedure Four elastomeric separators (American Orthodontics, Sheboygan, WI, USA were
placed, mesially and distally to the upper first molar on each side, with a specially
designed plier (Hu-Friedy, Chicago, IL, USA).
Both the laser and the placebo sides were applied by the diode laser (Laser HF, Hager-Werken
GmbH & Co., Duisburg, Germany), which was set at PDT mode (660nm) acu-puncture therapy. The
power of the laser was set at 90 mW in intervals of 80 seconds as recommended by the
manufacturer.
It was determined in advance that the right side of the upper jaw was treated with laser, and
the left side was placebo.
The laser was applied perpendicular in contact with the mucosa on 1 point of the buccal and 1
point on the palatal side of the first molar approximately on the middle part of the root,
with the 10mm distance from the laser to the mucosa. Each point was treated in 3 intervals,
80s each, in total 240s on vestibular and 240s on the palatal side per tooth. The treated
surface was 1cm2. The power of the laser was 90mW, wavelength 660n, beam area 1 cm2,
irradiance per target 0.09 W/cm2, during 240 seconds of treatment interval per point-
21.6J/cm2 of energy was delivered, with total energy applied 43.2 J per tooth. Pla-cebo side
was treated the same way with the difference that the laser was switched off, but with the
maintained sound signal, implying laser was working, so that participants were blinded to the
allocation of the group, only the operator knew whether the side is laser treated or placebo.
During the period of the laser irradiation, both the patient and orthodontist used goggles
designed to block the laser's wavelength.
The same laser treatment was performed the next day, as the pain was noted to be highest
within 24 hours after the placement of separators.
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