View clinical trials related to Periodontitis.
Filter by:This randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled two-arm, parallel group clinical trial is designed to evaluate the impact of the consumption of two herbal pralines containing 200 mg nitrate on clinical signs of gingival inflammation (Bleeding on probing) without an accompanied professional mechanical plaque removal.
Periodontitis (gum disease) leads to the formation of gum pockets. Its treatment involves deep cleaning of the teeth, to remove soft and hard tooth deposits under the gum line. Although in the long term this leads to improvement of the gum conditions and reduced inflammation, in the hours and days post-treatment, inflammation may increase, sometimes also associated with a high temperature. A method to reduce this response has not been found yet. The goal of this multi-centre randomized controlled trial is to to test if a diet which acts to mimic periodic fasting can influence responses in the mouth and throughout the body after treatment of gum disease in patients with advanced gum disease but general health conditions. Five Spanish centres (Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Universidad Internacional de Catalunya, Universidad de Murcia, Universidad de Santiago de Compostela, Universidad de Granada) will perform the clinical part of the study, whereas the King's College of London (Guy's Hospital) will provide the analyses and processing of the data. Researchers will include 24 patients in total. The main question it aims to answer is: - Is a mimic periodic fasting (together with the classical gum treatment) effective at reducing the local and systemic inflammation provoked by the gum disease (and by the same treatment) in the short- and medium term? Although all participants will receive the necessary gum treatment (deep cleaning), researchers will randomly assign them to one of two groups. The test group will follow three cycles (the same day of the treatment, and 45- and 85 days after treatment) of 5 days each of a fasting-mimicking diet (FMD). The FMD program is a plant-based diet program designed to attain fasting-like effects while providing both macro- and micronutrients to minimize the burden of fasting and adverse effects. The FMD consists of 100% ingredients that are generally regarded as safe (GRAS) and comprises proprietary vegetable-based soups, energy bars, energy drinks, cracker snacks, olives, herbal teas, and supplements. All items to be consumed per day are individually boxed. In contrast, the control group will continue with their current diet. All patients will complete dietary diaries to estimate calorie intake during this time period. Researchers will collect blood, stool, plaque and gingival crevicular fluid samples from each patient at different time points. Besides, they will call the patients one or two times during each FMD cycle to check that everything is proceeding properly and to solve any problems or concerns they may have. In addition, a trained registered dietitian will be available during the whole study period in case participants need some support or have doubts and/or questions. If participants miss multiple visits (e.g. 2/3) will be considered as a drop-out and, if they develop a serious medical condition, they might be excluded from the study. However, independently from the participation into this study, each patient will have their gum disease regularly treated. People with periodontal disease usually have a bad dietary-habits. This investigation with its holistic approach might lead people to modify their unbalanced diet due to the possible related local and systemic benefits. In addition, cycles of 5 days might consistently raise the adherence and willingness to follow such a fasting regime.
The goal of this clinical trial is to compare the effects of adjuvant antimicrobial photodynamic therapy (aPDT) as an adjuvant of scaling and root planing with scaling and root planing alone for periodontal treatment in patients with periodontal disease and obesity. The main question it aims to answer are: Does adjuvant aPDT improves periodontal health? Are there differences in the proteomic profile of gingival fluid after both treatments? Participants will receive scaling and root planing complemented or not by aPDT. Results will be collected after 1, 3, and 6 months. Researchers will compare adjuvant aPDT treatment to regular treatment to see if it promotes reduction in inflammation and improvement in periodontal health.
Micro-osteoperforations (MOPs) cause cortical bone injuries and consequently increase the expression of inflammatory mediators, allowing for increased bone and periodontal ligament remodeling associated with orthodontic movement. It remains unclear the effect of orthodontic intrusion combined with MOPs application on teeth with reduced periodontium. The general objective will be to determine the efficacy of MOPs during orthodontic tooth movement (OTM) in terms of periodontal and orthodontic outcomes in stage IV periodontitis patients, case type 2 with pathological tooth migration (PTM), characterized the presence of at least one flared tooth of the upper-anterior sextant with an intrabony defect (intrabony component <5mm)
This is a 12-month longitudinal, double-blind, parallel-design randomized controlled clinical trial involving surgical therapeutic intervention (Phase 4). It will include 50 participants aged 21 diagnosed with periodontitis (Stage III/IV, Grade A or B), divided into a Test Group (n=25, Minimally invasive single-flap surgery) and a Control Group (n=25, Minimally invasive double-flap surgery). The objective of this randomized, double-blind clinical study is to compare clinical, radiographic, and patient-centered outcomes between minimally invasive single-flap and double-flap techniques in treating isolated infra-bony defects. Twenty-five patients will be treated using the single-flap approach, and 25 patients will receive the double-flap elevation technique. Clinical parameters (plaque and bleeding scores, probing depth, gingival recession, clinical attachment level, and papillary dimensions), digital measurements (changes in gingival margin and papillary volume), radiographic assessments, and patient-centered outcomes (VAS scale) will be evaluated immediately before surgery, at 6 and 12 months post-procedure, while early healing will be assessed after 1 and 2 weeks following the procedures. Mean values and standard deviations will be calculated for each variable, normal distribution will be tested using the Shapiro-Wilk test, and comparisons will be conducted using Student's t-test and one-way ANOVA. A significance level of 5% will be used for all analyses.
The goal of this [interventional clinical trial] is to test effect of scaling and root plaining on Alkaline phosphatase in Saliva and Gingival crevicular fluid in periodontitis patients compared with healthy subjects The population from periodontitis patients compared with healthy individuals It aims to answer are: • 1_Alkaline phosphatase level in saliva and GCF. 2_Scaling and root plaining effect on Alkaline Phosphatase level. 0 participants will be asked to maintain their oral hygiene instructions. Researchers will compare [periodontitispatientsto healthyindividuals] to see if [AlkalinePhosphatase level].
Objective: The main aim of this cross-sectional clinical study is to evaluate the predictive ability of a panel of salivary biomarkers in determining periodontal health status. Material and methods: In this observational, cross-sectional study patients attending consecutively to the Periodontal Postgraduate Clinic at the University Complutense of Madrid. The participants will be categorized into different periodontal health status groups based on the 2018 classification of periodontal diseases, including periodontally healthy, gingivitis, treated periodontitis (stable/unstable), and various stages of periodontitis. During the screening visit, participants will undergo a comprehensive medical examination to gather relevant health information, including age, gender, weight, height, waist circumference, and drug, alcohol, and smoking history. Additionally, clinical assessments, saliva samples and microbiological parameters will be recorded. A convenience sample of 100 subjects will be recruited for this pilot study with the objective to generate data for the multivariate predictive analysis. Data analyses: Descriptive statistics will be used to report the clinical variables and patients will be grouped according to the pre-established diagnostic categories (periodontally healthy, gingivitis, treated periodontitis patient. In order to determine the possible statistical relationship with the medical, biochemical and microbiological variables assessed, a crude bivariate analysis will first be performed by applying a mean comparison test for quantitative variables (ANOVA) and a proportion comparison test for categorical variables (Chi-square). Subsequently, those variables identified as relevant in the crude analyses will be included as confounding and/or interaction factors in a binary logistic regression model, considering the presence of periodontitis as a response variable, in order to obtain crude and adjusted OR values, together with their corresponding 95% CIs. Based on the results obtained in the biomarker analysis, a relevant statistical analysis will be performed, taking into account all the variables collected in the study
The study will be a single center, longitudinal prospective, triple blind (investigators, patients and statistician), randomized design. After informed consent, a target population of about 75 healthy adult volunteers with periodontitis will be included in the study. Patients will be randomized and categorized into three experimental groups each containing 25 patients. The randomization process will be carried out by use of sequentially numbered opaque sealed envelopes (SNOSE method).The recording of all the soft tissues data plaque index, gingival index, the modified sulcus bleeding index and the periodontal probing depth and clinical attachment level will be carried out at baseline, 4 weeks, 8 weeks, 12 weeks and will be maintained till 24 weeks for efficacy and safety evaluation.
This study aims to assess the hypothesis that revitalization of teeth without (a)symptomatic apical periodontitis have a more favourable outcome in terms of further root development, periapical bone healing, maintaining/regaining pulp sensitivity and survival, than teeth with (a)symptomatic apical periodontitis.
Objectives: Primary: To determine the efficacy of periodontal treatment on mental health outcomes in patients with major depression and periodontitis. Secondary: To identify the effect of periodontal treatment on oral, periodontal, and fecal metagenomic microbiomes, and on systemic levels of inflammation (bacterial, viral, and fungal) and their impact on mental health outcomes. Material and method: A 6-month pilot randomized controlled clinical trial is designed. The study will be conducted in patients with moderate or severe DM (Patient Health Questionnaire-9 [PHQ-9] index of 9 or higher) and stage III-IV periodontitis who will be assigned to two different interventions: - Test group: standard periodontal treatment consisting of two sessions of supragingival and subgingival debridement (steps 1 and 2) under local anesthesia. - Control group: periodontal treatment consisting of two sessions of supragingival debridement (step 1) under local anesthesia. The study will consist of 6 visits: - Screening visit (v0) - Baseline visit (v1): - In the mental health center: patients will receive a structured clinical interview for the DSM-IV (SCID) and the patient will fill out a series of specific scales on a study-specific electronic device [Beck Depression Inventory (BDI); UCLA Loneliness Scale, Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression scale [CES-D]; Childhood Trauma Questionnaire short form (CTQ-SF); The World Health Organization Quality of Life questionnaire (WHOQOL); Hamilton scale (HAM-D17); Global Assessment of Functioning (GAF) Scale]. - At the UCM School of Dentistry: patients will receive a complete periodontal examination (clinical and radiographic). A subgingival microbiological sample, a saliva sample and a blood sample will also be taken. - At the participant's home: the stool samples will be deposited by the participants at home in the specific collection vial. - Intervention visits (v2-3): Two periodontal treatment sessions (test or control) will be carried out one week apart. - Re-evaluation visit (v4): Six weeks after treatment, all periodontal clinical variables will be recorded. - Follow-up visits at 3 and 6 months: after periodontal treatment, all the variables recorded at the baseline visit will be taken Statistical analysis: Periodontal treatment (test/control) will be considered as the independent variable and the Hamilton scale (HAM-D17) will be considered the primary response variable. The rest of the variables will be considered as secondary variables. A crude bivariate analysis of comparison of means or proportions will be carried out depending on the nature of the variable. In addition, crude and adjusted regression models will be performed.