View clinical trials related to Periodontitis.
Filter by:Periodontal diseases are complex chronic pathologies presenting a high prevalence worldwide. Etiopathological process involved in initiation and progression of these multifactorial diseases are not well understood, explaining the huge clinical forms variability and the complexity of the currently used classification of periodontal diseases. Recently, the implication of antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) have been suggested as potential track of explanation for periodontal diseases pathogeny. The here presented study explore the level of expression of genes coding those peptides by studying periodontal smears obtained from healthy and periodontitis patients.
In Nepal, investigators are conducting a cohort study to estimate the relationship between signs of periodontal disease in pregnant women and preterm delivery. Within that cohort study, investigators plan to conduct an individually randomized trial of the acceptability and effect chlorhexidine, cetylpyridinium chloride, and salt water oral rinses on gingival crevicular fluid and plaque during pregnancy. Women for this pilot trial will be chosen from a subset of the area currently engaged in the larger cohort study, to simplify logistics. The pilot trial will have four arms (three oral rinse arms, and one control group). - Arm 1: Twice daily oral rinse containing chlorhexidine 0.12% w/v (n=25 women with periodontitis - Arm 2: Twice daily oral rinse with cetylpyridinium chloride (n=50; 25 women with/without periodontitis) - Arm 3: Twice daily oral rinse with salt and water (n=50: 25 women with/without periodontitis) - Arm 4: No oral rinse (n=50) To select and enroll these 175 participants, data collectors will use the information they collected during an oral health clinical examination conducted at the time of enrollment into the broader cohort study; this information will be used to classify women by signs of periodontitis. Those selected through this above process will be read an additional consent form; those agreeing to participate will be provided with a supply of their assigned rinse (and instructions on its use and handling/storage), or no rinse. Those in the three rinse groups will be asked to use the provided rinse twice per day after brushing and to save the empty bottles for collection by the health care worker. At the end of this first visit, women will additionally provide a venous blood sample to measure systemic inflammation markers and fluoride. Women receiving the rinse will be visited by study workers periodically to provide more oral rinse and check on their adherence to the rinse. All 175 women will be visited after 12 weeks to undergo a second oral health clinical examination and provide a second set of gingival crevicular fluid and plaque samples, to allow for evaluation of the effect of each of the oral rinses as compared to the normal physiological changes in gingival inflammation and biofilm composition during the course of pregnancy. At this final visit, the women in the three rinse arms will also answer a short questionnaire to gather feedback on acceptability and adherence to the oral rinse.
Although RA pathomechanisms remains incompletely understood, periodontitis and RA share pathogenic features : genetic and environmental influences, chronic inflammatory disease, immunoregulatory imbalance, bacterial factors, persistence of antigen/peptide and clinical factors (conjunctive and hard tissues destruction). Several hypothesis can be evocated : Gram negative bacterial systemic spreading, inflammatory transmitter substance systemic spreading (IL1, IL6, IL17, PGE2), systemic spreading of bacterial degradation products (LPS for example). Currently Porphyromonas gingivalis (PG) might be a susceptibility factor to RA because PG has an enzyme, the peptidylarginine deiminase leading to auto antibodies creation and RA increasing. As periodontitis, RA is chronic disease with a cyclic increase evolution, needing a complex pluridisciplinary treatment approach. Recent studies have reported an increased prevalence of RA patients with periodontal disease. Others studies show that periodontal treatment induces a significant decrease of the sedimentation rate and of the DAS28. Periodontitis is suspected to be an independent, aggravating factor in patients with RA (given the definition from NIH : an aggravating factor is something that makes a condition worse). So periodontal treatment cannot be considered as a RA treatment per se. But it is hypothesised that treating periodontitis in RA patients showing signs of periodontitis could result in improvement in RA disease activity. To date the role of periodontitis as an aggravating factor in these patients remains unclear, and only RCT designs can reasonably be used to test this causal hypothesis. There still remains some RA patients who have persistent symptoms and frequent exacerbations despite specialist care and continuous treatment, so results of treating aggravating factors are needed. As the majority of patients will benefit from a systematic evaluation and treatment of aggravating factors, the periodontal treatment strategy need to be tested. The aim of this randomised controlled trial is to assess the effectiveness of periodontal treatment for rheumatoid arthritis patients. To assess the effectiveness of periodontal treatment to reduce the severity of rheumatoid arthritis (RA), in patients suffering from both periodontitis and rheumatoid arthritis. The hypothesis is that periodontal treatment reduce the severity of rheumatoid arthritis.
To evaluate the effectiveness of non surgical periodontal therapy in addition to antioxidant(ALA) on resistin levels in patients with type 2 diabetes and periodontal disease
The aim of this study was to formulate a mucoadhesive gel of grapes seed extract (GSE) followed by short-term clinical study for the effectiveness of this gel onto the pocket depth (PD), plaque index (PI), gingival index (GI), and bleeding on probing (BOP) when applied in periodontal pockets as an adjunct treatment for chronic periodontitis.
The study was aimed to investigating changes in periodontal parameters and superoxide dismutase activity after root surface debridement with and without Omega 3 fatty acids (ω-3 FAs) supplementation in postmenopausal women. Adjunctive Omega 3 fatty acids supplements reduce periodontal inflammation and improve the status of systemic enzymatic antioxidants in postmenopausal women.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether ST266 will reduce pocket depth (PD) as an adjunctive to scaling and root planing (SRP) in subjects with moderate to severe periodontal disease.
Pathologic tooth migration (PTM) is a common complication of advanced periodontitis and often motivation for patients to seek orthodontic therapy. An interdisciplinary approach is required to control the periodontal infection, reconstruct the defects and realign the migrated teeth. The optimal timing of active orthodontics after regenerative therapy is a topic of ongoing debate. There are no data available from RCTs that have compared the effect of the timing of orthodontic tooth movement (early vs. late) on the outcomes of regenerative periodontal surgery in these patients. It is the aim of the present randomized clinical multicenter trial to compare 2 different treatment protocols of a combined perio-regenerative and orthodontic therapy in advanced periodontitis patients with intrabony defects and pathologic tooth migration in order to establish whether one treatment modality is superior to the other with regard to clinical outcomes. A total of 46 patients will be enrolled and randomized into 2 treatment groups that differ by the time point of initiation of orthodontic therapy (early: 4 weeks vs. late: 6 months following regenerative periodontal surgery). Primary outcome measure will be the change in clinical attachment level (CAL gain) at 12 months after regenerative therapy. Secondary outcomes will include changes in probing depth BOP, gingival recession, radiographic bone height and patient-centered outcomes.
200 patients took part in the questionnaire and were examined using the PSI. Thereafter the participants were divided into two groups, non-periodontitis persons (group 1; PSI 0-2) and periodontitis persons (group 2; PSI 3-4). The answers were evaluated using a point system ranging from 0 to 8, based on known periodontal risk factors and their assumed degree of influence. Receiver-operating characteristic (ROC) curve analyses were applied to examine the overall discriminatory power, sensitivity and specificity, and corresponding cut-off points of the self-reported periodontal disease scale.
The aim of this randomized clinical trial is to compare the antibacterial effects of 1% sodium hypochlorite (NaOCl) and 2% chlorhexidine gluconate (CHX) during retreatment of teeth with apical periodontitis (AP).