| Literature DB >> 30925801 |
Mesfin Yimam1, Lidia Brownell2, Seon-Gil Do3, Young-Chul Lee4, Dong Seon Kim5, Kangmoon Seo6, Manbok Jeong7, Seeun Kim8, Qi Jia9.
Abstract
Periodontal disease is an inflammatory disease of the gum caused by a formation of a plaque that triggers immune responses and inflammation leading to the destruction of tissues surrounding and supporting the teeth. Chronic usage of synthetic chemicals and antibiotics is limited by undesired adverse events to the host. A botanical composition (UP446), which consists primarily of bioflavonoids such as baicalin from roots of Scutellaria baicalensis and catechins from heartwoods of Acacia catechu, was evaluated for its effect on ligature-induced periodontal disease in beagle dogs. Disease model was induced in 20 male and female dogs. After a 12-week induction of periodontitis, animals were assigned to a placebo, positive control (doxycycline), and two treatment groups consisting of five animals each. The placebo group was only administrated to normal dog chow (25 g/kg/day). In the doxycycline treatment group, animals were fed a normal diet (25 g/kg/day) and doxycycline (5 mg/kg) was orally administrated every day. Treatment of UP446 was done by feeding the regular diet formulated with 0.1% and 0.2% of UP446 by weight. Clinical indices such as plaque index (PI), gingival index (GI), clinical attachment level (CAL), probing pocket depth (PPD), and bleeding on probing (BoP) were measured every two weeks for 12 weeks. UP446 administered to beagle dogs for 12 weeks at 0.1% and 0.2% resulted in statistically significant reductions in gingivitis, pocket depth, loss of attachment, and gum bleeding. UP446 could potentially be used alone or as an adjunct with other oral hygiene preparations for periodontal disease in both human and companion animals.Entities:
Keywords: Acacia catechu; Scutellaria baicalensis; UP446; beagle dogs; periodontal disease; periodontitis
Year: 2019 PMID: 30925801 PMCID: PMC6631249 DOI: 10.3390/dj7020033
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dent J (Basel) ISSN: 2304-6767
Dosing of each treatment.
| Group | Treatment | Dosage | Duration of Treatment (Weeks) | No. of Animal (Male: Female) | Amount of Diet (g/kg/day) | Route of Treatment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| I | Placebo | 0 | 12 | 5 (1:4) | 25 | - |
| II | Doxycycline | 5 mg/kg | 12 | 5 (1:4) | 25 | p.o.q.d |
| III | UP446 | 0.1% in diet | 12 | 5 (2:3) | 25 | Formulated in Diet |
| IV | UP446 | 0.2% in diet | 12 | 5 (2:3) | 25 | Formulated in Diet |
Clinical parameters (Figure 1).
| Parameters | Grades | |
|---|---|---|
| PI 1 | 0 | No Plaque |
| 1 | A film of plaque adhering to the free gingival margin and adjacent area of the tooth. (not more than 1 mm) | |
| 2 | Moderate accumulation of soft deposits within the gingival pocket, or on the tooth and gingival margin which can be seen with the naked eye. (less than one half of crown) | |
| 3 | Abundance of soft matter within the gingival pocket and/or on the tooth and gingival margin. (more than one half of crown) | |
| GI 2 | 0 | Absence of inflammation |
| 1 | Mild inflammation—slight change in color of gingival margin and little change in texture | |
| 2 | Moderate inflammation—moderate glazing, redness, edema, and hypertrophy. Bleeding on pressure. | |
| 3 | Severe inflammation—marked redness and hypertrophy, spontaneous bleeding and ulceration | |
| PPD 3 | The distance between the gingival margin and the bottom of the probable pocket | |
| CAL 3 | The distance between the cement enamel junction and the bottom of the probable pocket | |
| BoP 3 | 0 | Absence of bleeding within 10 s following probing |
| 1 | Presence of bleeding within 10 s following probing | |
1 Silness J, Loe H. Periodontal disease in pregnancy. II. Correlation between oral hygiene and periodontal condition. Acta Odontol Scand 1964; 22: 121–135. 2 Loe H, Silness J. Periodontal disease in pregnancy. I. Prevalence and severity. Acta Odontol Scand 1963; 21: 533–551. 3 Wennstrom JL, Newman HN, MacNeill SR, et al. Utilization of locally delivered doxycycline in non-surgical treatment of chronic periodontitis. A comparative multi-centre trial of 2 treatment approaches. J Clin Periodontol 2001; 28: 753–761.
Figure 2Changes in mean plaque indices in beagle dogs with ligature-induced periodontitis. Values are represented as differences between before and after treatment. *; denote significance at p < 0.05 when compared with placebo and treated groups at the same week.
Figure 3Changes in mean gingival indices in beagle dogs with ligature-induced periodontitis. Values are represented as differences between before and after treatment. *; denote significance at p < 0.05 when compared with placebo and treated groups at the same week. †; denote significance at p < 0.05 when compared with doxycycline and UP446 groups at the same week.
Figure 4Changes in mean periodontal pocket depth in beagle dogs with ligature-induced periodontitis. Values are represented as differences between before and after treatment. *; denote significance at p < 0.05 when compared with placebo and treated groups at the same week.
Figure 5Changes in mean clinical attachment level in beagle dogs with ligature-induced periodontitis. Values are represented as differences between before and after treatment. *; denote significance at p < 0.05 when compared with placebo and treated groups at the same week. †; denote significance at p < 0.05 when compared with doxycycline and UP446 groups at the same week.
Figure 6Changes in mean bleeding on probing in beagle dogs with ligature-induced periodontitis. Values are represented as differences between before and after treatment. *; denote significance at p < 0.05 when compared with placebo and treated groups at the same week. †; denote significance at p < 0.05 when compared with doxycycline and UP446 groups at the same week.