| Literature DB >> 28050280 |
Nermin M Yussif1, Manar A Abdul Aziz2, Ahmed R Abdel Rahman3.
Abstract
Objective. The purpose of this study is to investigate the role and efficiency of the locally injected vitamin C in the treatment of persistent gingival inflammation. Design. Twenty adult patients with persistent chronic gingival inflammation were included in this study. The same dose of sterile vitamin C was injected in gingival tissues after the completion of phase I therapy. Gingival biopsies were taken after total resolution of inflammation. The specimens were examined histologically, using H&E stain. Results. Clinical evaluation revealed great improvement of the injected sites with recall visits. Histopathological results revealed marked decrease in inflammatory cells and epithelial thickness and a higher number of newly formed subbasal capillaries. Conclusions. Vitamin C is an effective adjunctive treatment in reducing various degrees of chronic gingival inflammation.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 28050280 PMCID: PMC5165168 DOI: 10.1155/2016/2978741
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Nutr Metab ISSN: 2090-0724
Figure 1Scheme of the biological function of ascorbic acid as an antioxidant.
Figure 2Scheme represents the procedure steps.
Figure 3Preoperative photo: this patient was referred from the oral surgery department for hygiene reinforcement prior to immediate implant in relation to the upper right canine. Postoperative photo revealed total improvement of the gingival inflammation after 2 vitamin C injections.
Figure 4Preoperative photo: this patient was referred from the orthodontic department suffering from severe bleeding gums. Postoperative photo revealed partial improvement of the gingival inflammation after 2 vitamin C injections. The patient needed further injection for total improvement.
Microscopic features of preoperative and postoperative specimens are summarized.
| Tissue components | Preoperative | 1st postoperative | Postoperative |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| Epithelial thickness | Hyperplastic | Less hyperplastic | Almost normal |
| Intercellular edema | Severe | Markedly reduced | Absent |
| Epithelial cell vacuolization | Degenerated cells | Present | Present |
| Basal cell alignment | Crowded | Well aligned | Well aligned |
| Basement membrane | Masked in some areas | Detected | Well formed |
| Inflammatory infiltrate | Present in some area | Absent | Absent |
|
| |||
| Acute inflammatory cells | Present in subepithelial CT | Absent | Absent |
| Chronic inflammatory cells | Present in subepithelial and deep CT | Present in deep CT | Present in deep CT |
| Collagen fibers | Few | More | Forming bundles |
| Blood vessels | Few and large | More | More |
| Subepithelial minute blood capillaries | Absent | Present | Numerous |
Figure 5(a) Photomicrograph of chronically inflamed gingival tissue (preoperative) showing hyperplastic epithelium with long and broad rete ridges and intense inflammatory cell infiltrate in superficial and deep CT (×100). Intraepithelial edema and intense inflammatory cell infiltrate formed of acute and chronic inflammatory cells (×400). (b) Photomicrograph of the same case after single injection of vit-C showing hyperplastic epithelium with slightly narrower rete ridges, numerous minute blood capillaries, collagen fibers formation, and mild inflammatory cell infiltrate (×100). Reduced intercellular edema with fewer chronic inflammatory cells and collagen fibers formation were detected (×400). (c) Photomicrograph of the same case after two injections (in two sessions) of vit-C showing marked reduction in epithelial thickness, superficial minute, and deep larger blood capillaries, collagen fiber bundles formation, and mild inflammatory cell infiltrate (×100). Marked reduction of vacuolized epithelial cells, reduced intercellular edema, well-demarcated basement membrane, increased number of blood capillaries, and almost absence of inflammatory cells (×400).