Literature DB >> 18454656

Disease progression in periodontally healthy and maintenance subjects.

R P Teles1, M Patel, S S Socransky, A D Haffajee.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The aim of this study was to determine whether the rate of attachment loss in periodontally healthy subjects in a prevention regimen would differ from the rate of disease progression in periodontitis subjects enrolled in a maintenance program.
METHODS: Fifty-five periodontally healthy subjects and 57 periodontitis subjects were clinically and microbiologically monitored at baseline and at 1, 2, and 3 years. Clinical parameters measured at six sites per tooth included bleeding on probing, visible plaque, probing depth, and attachment level. Subgingival plaque samples were taken from the mesio-buccal aspect of every tooth and were analyzed for the levels of 40 bacterial species using checkerboard DNA-DNA hybridization. The significance of differences over time in the clinical parameters was determined using repeated-measures analysis of variance, whereas the significance of differences between groups was determined using the unpaired t test. The Mann-Whitney test was used for microbial analyses, and P values were adjusted for multiple comparisons.
RESULTS: Mean clinical parameters improved for both groups over time. By the end of the study, 4% of the sites in maintenance subjects lost > or =2 mm of attachment, whereas in the prophylaxis subjects only 1% of the sites lost > or =2 mm of attachment. Maintenance subjects lost attachment primarily at shallow buccal and lingual sites. The maintenance subjects harbored significantly higher levels of most test species throughout the study. The maintenance program did not reduce the levels of red complex species to those typical of healthy subjects.
CONCLUSIONS: Treated periodontitis subjects under maintenance displayed more rapid attachment loss than periodontally healthy subjects in a preventive regimen. The greater propensity to disease progression may be related to an elevated exposure to periodontal pathogens.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18454656     DOI: 10.1902/jop.2008.070485

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Periodontol        ISSN: 0022-3492            Impact factor:   6.993


  12 in total

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Review 2.  Lessons learned and unlearned in periodontal microbiology.

Authors:  Ricardo Teles; Flavia Teles; Jorge Frias-Lopez; Bruce Paster; Anne Haffajee
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Review 3.  Metatranscriptome of the Oral Microbiome in Health and Disease.

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5.  Effect of periodontal therapy on the subgingival microbiota over a 2-year monitoring period. I. Overall effect and kinetics of change.

Authors:  Sigmund S Socransky; Anne D Haffajee; Ricardo Teles; Jan L Wennstrom; Jan Lindhe; Anna Bogren; Hatice Hasturk; Thomas van Dyke; Xiaoshan Wang; Jo Max Goodson
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6.  Microbiologic profile of endodontic infections from HIV- and HIV+ patients using multiple-displacement amplification and checkerboard DNA-DNA hybridization.

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7.  Application of the checkerboard immunoblotting technique to the quantification of host biomarkers in gingival crevicular fluid.

Authors:  Ricardo P Teles; Dimitra Sakellari; Antonis Konstantinidis; Sigmund S Socransky; Anne D Haffajee
Journal:  J Periodontol       Date:  2009-03       Impact factor: 6.993

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Journal:  J Periodontol       Date:  2020-11-03       Impact factor: 6.993

Review 9.  Supportive periodontal therapy (SPT) for maintaining the dentition in adults treated for periodontitis.

Authors:  Carolina Manresa; Elena C Sanz-Miralles; Joshua Twigg; Manuel Bravo
Journal:  Cochrane Database Syst Rev       Date:  2018-01-01

10.  Relationship between herpesviruses and periodontal disease progression.

Authors:  Pinar Emecen-Huja; Robert J Danaher; Dolphus R Dawson; Chunmei Wang; Richard J Kryscio; Jeffrey L Ebersole; Craig S Miller
Journal:  J Clin Periodontol       Date:  2020-02-03       Impact factor: 7.478

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