| Literature DB >> 32941479 |
Risako Mikami1, Koji Mizutani1, Yoshiyuki Sasaki2, Takanori Iwata1, Akira Aoki1.
Abstract
Adjunctive use of laser devices as high reactive-level laser/light therapy (HLLT) or photobiomodulation therapy (PBMT) for periodontal therapy is known to be more effective on suppressing pain than conventional therapy, however, there are no systematic reviews addressed its effectiveness. This systematic review and meta-analysis aim to investigate the following clinical question (CQ): does adjunctive use of lasers with conventional therapy suppress the pain associated with periodontal treatment? A systematic and extensive literature search was performed to summarize the currently available knowledge to answer the CQ using the PubMed, Cochrane Library, and Web of Science databases for randomized controlled trials (RCTs) conducted before June 2020. Bias risk was assessed using the Cochrane tool for the risk of bias evaluation. A meta-analysis was performed on quantitative evaluation of pain control based on patient-reported outcomes. After an independent screening of 165 initial records, ten RCTs were included. Six of them focused on surgical procedures and the others on non-surgical periodontal pocket therapy. The protocols of HLLT, PBMT, and combination with HLLT and PBMT were employed in five, four and one RCTs, respectively. Following the assessment of bias risk, it is revealed that all RCTs had methodological weaknesses regarding the blinding of key personnel, although other bias risk factors were not evident. Meta-analysis showed that HLLT using erbium lasers significantly reduced the patient-reported pain immediately after treatment (two RCTs, p < 0.0001), while PBMT using diode lasers significantly reduced pain 2-7 days after treatment (two RCTs, p < 0.0001 to p = 0.03). The presented systematic review and meta-analysis suggest that the alternative use of HLLT using erbium lasers to conventional instrumentation can significantly suppress postoperative pain and that intraoperative or postoperative PBMT using diode lasers combined with periodontal surgery can significantly reduce postoperative pain. However, the evidence is still insufficient and more well-designed RCTs are required.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32941479 PMCID: PMC7498060 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0238659
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1PRISMA flow diagram of the study inclusion criteria.
Characteristics of the included studies.
| Study ID | Year | Number of participants (Male/Female) | Age in mean ± SD (range) | Country | Center | Category | Grouping methods | Periodontal treatment | Study design | Evaluation interval | Main findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ozcelik | 2008 | 22 (12/10) | N/A (31-49) | Turkey | University hospital | PBMT | 1. EMD, | Regenerative therapy (EMD) | Split-mouth | Day 1-7 | EMD+PBMT had resulted in less gingival recession, less swelling and less VAS scores compared with EMD alone. |
| Braun | 2010 | 40 (21/19) | 55.3 ± 10.0 | Germany | University hospital | HLLT | 1. Laser, 2. Sc | Sc | Split-mouth | Post-treatment | Pain assessment showed that laser treatment caused less pain than the sonic device with no difference in the treatment time. |
| Rotundo | 2010 | 27 (9/18) | 50.5 ± 11.7 | Sweden | University hospital | HLLT | 1. Sc, 2. Laser+SRP, | SRP | Split-mouth | Pre- and post-treatment, 1w, 6 M | The adjunctive use of laser to SRP did not show additional effectiveness in periodontal condition. Laser+SRP group tended to have less pain immediately and one week after treatment than SRP alone group, however the differences are not significant. |
| Slot | 2012 | 30 (13/17) | 48.7 ± 11.3 (39-65) | Netherlands | Private clinic | HLLT | 1. SRP, | SRP | Split-mouth | Post-treatment | The adjunctive use of laser to SRP did not show additional effectiveness in periodontal condition. Laser+SRP treated quadrants presented with significantly more postoperative pain. |
| Sanz-Moliner | 2013 | 13 (8/5) | 52 ± 8.5 | USA | University hospital | HLLT and PBMT | 1. Fop, 2. Fop+Laser | Fop | Split-mouth | Day 1-7 | Statistically significant differences were shown for pain scale assessment and pain medication consumption favoring test sites. |
| Yilmaz | 2014 | 32 (13/19) | Test: 29.0 ± 4.1, Control: 29.3 ± 4.8 | Turkey | University hospital | HLLT | 1. Laser-assisted laterally positioned flap, | Laterally positioned flap | Parallel | 1 w | The ratio of complete root coverage in test group is significantly higher than control group. There were no differences in VAS pain score between the groups. |
| Ge | 2017 | 31 (14/17) | 35.2 ± 9.8 (24-72) | China | University hospital | HLLT | 1. Laser, 2. SRP | SRP | Split-mouth | Post-treatment | The reduction of PPD and BOP at weeks 6 and 12 was significantly higher in laser group than in SRP group. The VAS pain score was significantly lower in laser group than in SRP group. |
| Heidari | 2018 | 30 (14/16) | 42.5 ± 9.5 (23-63) | Iran | Private clinic | PBMT | 1. Fop+PBMT, 2. Fop | Fop | Split-mouth | Day 1-7 | Patients reported less pain on days 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7 after surgery in Fop+PBMT group. Furthermore, fewer analgesics were used in this group on days 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7 following the surgery. |
| Yildiz | 2018 | 30 (2/28) | Test: 25.53 ± 6.25, Control: 26.94 ± 7.06 | Turkey | University hospital | PBMT | 1. FGG+PBMT, | FGG | Parallel | Day 1-7 | FGG+PBMT group showed significantly lower VAS pain score and less number of analgesic used. |
| Isler | 2018 | 36 (12/24) | Test: 41.25 ± 10.91, Control: 38.41 ± 14.66 | Turkey | University hospital | PBMT | 1. PBMT, 2. Ozone, | FGG | Parallel | Day | No significant difference was obsereved in each group regarding the remaining wound area. Regarding VAS pain score, the control group had higher VAS scores at all time points, no statistically significant difference was observed between the groups. |
HLLT, high reactive-level laser/light therapy; Sc, Scaling; SRP, scaling and root planing; VAS, visual analogue scale; PPD, probing pocket depth; BOP bleeding on probing; PBMT, photobiomodulation therapy; EMD, enamel matrix derivative; Fop, flap operation; FGG, free gingival graft technique
Parameters and regimens of lasers applied in the included studies.
| Study ID | Year | Category | Type of laser | Wavelength (nm) | Output power | Repetition rate | Method of application |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ozcelik | 2008 | PBMT | Diode | 588 | 4 J/cm2 | N/A | Immediately after EMD application, the defect area was irradiated with PBMT for 10 min. PBMT was applied from the outer buccal and lingual surfaces for 5 min each, immediately after suturing, and daily for 5 days. |
| Braun | 2010 | HLLT | Er:YAG | N/A | 120 mJ/pulse (panel) | 10 Hz | The laser was used to remove subgingival biofilm. Maximum irradiation time was set to 2 min per tooth. |
| Rotundo | 2010 | HLLT | Er:YAG | 2,940 | 150 mJ/pulse | 10 Hz | The application of the laser treatment was performed from coronal to apical direction with an inclination of the conic fibre tip of about 20° under water irrigation. |
| Slot | 2012 | HLLT | Nd:YAG | 1,064 | 400 mJ/pulse (panel) | 50 Hz | The fibre tip was held in contact with the tissue and aligned parallel to the tooth with water cooling. The laser was applied for no more than 60 sec per site. |
| Sanz-Moliner | 2013 | HLLT and | Diode | 810 ± 20 | 1 W (HLLT) | CW | HLLT was performed to remove all visible epithelium in the inner side of the flap from the free gingival margin to the bottom of the apical aspect of the flap. For PBMT, all surfaces of the flap, inner and outer, exposed bone, and exposed root structures involved in the surgery were irradiated, leading to a total dosage of 4 J/cm2 per surface. |
| Yilmaz | 2014 | HLLT | Diode | 810 | 3 W | CW | An external horizontal releasing incision on the vestibular alveolar mucosa and de-epithelialization of the interdental papilla were performed with diode laser. |
| Ge | 2017 | HLLT | Er,Cr:YSGG | 2,780 | 1.25 W | 30 Hz | The fiber optic head was moved around the periodontal pockets and across the surface of the root furcations, while debris was washed out of the priodontal pockets under water irrigation. |
| Heidari | 2018 | PBMT | Diode | 940 | 40 J/cm2 | CW | PBMT ware applied to both buccal and lingual surfaces with energy density 40 J/cm2 and the irradiated area was 2.8 cm2. PBMT were performed only during surgery. |
| Yildiz | 2018 | PBMT | Diode | 810 | 6 J/cm2 | CW | PBMT was applied with output power 0.1 W for 60 sec at recipient sites immediately, 1, 3, 7, and 14 days after surgery. |
| Isler | 2018 | PBMT | Diode | 970 ± 15 | 2 W, 5.25 J/cm2 | CW | Total irradiation time was 30 sec (6 sec for each point). PBMT was performed immediately, 1, 3 and 7 days after surgery. |
HLLT, high reactive-level laser/light therapy; CW, continuous wave; PBMT, photobiomodulation therapy; EMD, enamel matrix derivative
Fig 2Risk of bias summary: Authors’ judgements about each risk of bias item for each included study.
Fig 3Risk of bias graph: Authors’ judgements about each risk of bias item presented as percentages across all included studies.
Meta-analysis of HLLT effects, comparison: HLLT using Erbium lasers versus conventional instrumentation in periodontal therapy, outcome: VAS score for pain assessment.
| Test for total effect | Test for heterogenity | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Studies | Number of participants | Model | MD | 95% CI | ||||
| Immediately after treatment | 29, 31 | 114 | Fixed | -34.38 | -39.33 to -29.44 | <0.0001 | 84 | 0.01 |
MD, mean difference; CI, confidence interval
*p < 0.05, significant difference between HLLT and conventional instrument in periodontal therapy
Meta-analysis of PBMT effects, comparison: PBMT using diode lasers versus non-PBMT in periodontal therapy, outcome: VAS score for pain assessment.
| Test for total effect | Test for heterogenity | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Studies | Number of participants | Model | MD | 95% CI | ||||
| Day 1 | 33, 34 | 82 | Fixed | -3.10 | -12.21 to 6.00 | 0.5 | 0 | 0.8 |
| Day 2 | 33, 34 | 82 | Fixed | -8.67 | -16.52 to -0.83 | 0.03 | 0 | 0.42 |
| Day 3 | 33, 34 | 82 | Fixed | -14.92 | -23.38 to -6.45 | 0.0006 | 7 | 0.3 |
| Day 4 | 33, 34 | 82 | Fixed | -13.71 | -20.22 to -7.20 | <0.0001 | 52 | 0.15 |
| Day 5 | 33, 34 | 82 | Fixed | -11.09 | -17.23 to -4.96 | 0.0004 | 0 | 0.63 |
| Day 6 | 33, 34 | 82 | Fixed | -10.82 | -17.33 to -4.31 | 0.001 | 0 | 0.64 |
| Day 7 | 33, 34 | 82 | Fixed | -7.31 | -12.68 to -1.93 | 0.008 | 0 | 1 |
MD, mean difference; CI, confidence interval
*p < 0.05, significant difference between PBMT and non-PBMT in periodontal therapy