34 results on '"Petsos H"'
Search Results
2. Association, prediction, generalizability: Cross-center validity of predicting tooth loss in periodontitis patients
- Author
-
Schwendicke, F., primary, Arsiwala, L.T., additional, Krois, J., additional, Bäumer, A., additional, Pretzl, B., additional, Eickholz, P., additional, Petsos, H., additional, Kocher, T., additional, Holtfreter, B., additional, and Graetz, C., additional
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Long-term tooth retention in periodontitis patients in four German university centres
- Author
-
Graetz, C., primary, Bäumer, A., additional, Eickholz, P., additional, Kocher, T., additional, Petsos, H., additional, Pretzl, B., additional, Schwendicke, F., additional, and Holtfreter, B., additional
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Periodontal pockets: Predictors for site-related worsening after non-surgical therapy-A long-term retrospective cohort study.
- Author
-
Herz MM, Hoffmann N, Braun S, Lachmann S, Bartha V, and Petsos H
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Retrospective Studies, Middle Aged, Aged, Tooth Mobility, Adult, Periodontal Index, Periodontal Attachment Loss therapy, Furcation Defects therapy, Disease Progression, Periodontal Pocket therapy
- Abstract
Aim: To evaluate site-related changes in periodontal pocket depth (PPD) after non-surgical periodontal therapy and to identify predictors for PPD changes in a retrospective patient data analysis., Materials and Methods: PPD, clinical attachment level, bleeding on probing, tooth mobility (TM), furcation involvement (FI), abutment status, adherence to supportive periodontal care (SPC) and SPC follow-ups were obtained from fully documented patient data before periodontal therapy (baseline, T0), after active periodontal therapy (APT, T1) and during SPC (T2). PPD changes were classified into deteriorated or unchanged/improved at the site level. Multi-level logistic regression analysis was performed to identify factors influencing PPD changes during SPC., Results: This retrospective study included 51 females and 65 males (mean T0 age: 54.8 ± 10.1 years, 25 smokers, 12 diabetics) suffering from Stage III/IV periodontitis. Evaluation outcome: T0/16,044 sampling sites/2674 teeth; T1/15,636/2606; T2/14,754/2459. During 9.0 ± 2.3 years SPC, PPD decreased (-1.33 ± 0.70 mm) by 21.8% of the sites, remained unchanged by 41.4% and increased (1.40 ± 0.78 mm) by 36.8%. Distopalatal FI (p < .001, odds ratio [OR]: 0.252, 95% confidence interval [CI] for OR: 0.118-0.540), residual pockets (p < .001, OR: 0.503, 95% CI: 0.429-0.590) and TM Degrees I-III (Degree I: p = .002, OR: 0.765, 95% CI: 0.646-0.905; Degree II: p = .006, OR: 0.658, 95% CI: 0.489-0.886; Degree III: p = .023, OR: 0.398, 95% CI: 0.180-0.879) correlated significantly with increasing PPD., Conclusions: Over 75% of PPD remained unchanged or increased during SPC. Distopalatal FI, TM Degrees I-III and residual pockets after APT lead to worsening of periodontal pockets., (© 2024 The Authors. Journal of Clinical Periodontology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Influence of fixed orthodontic steel retainers on gingival health and recessions of mandibular anterior teeth in an intact periodontium - a randomized, clinical controlled trial.
- Author
-
Petsos H, Usherenko R, Dahmer I, Eickholz P, Kopp S, and Sayahpour B
- Subjects
- Humans, Child, Adolescent, Young Adult, Adult, Steel, Gingiva, Periodontium, Orthodontic Appliance Design, Gingival Diseases, Gingival Recession etiology
- Abstract
Objective: Aim of this randomized clinical controlled trial was to evaluate the influence of fixed orthodontic steel retainers on gingival health and recessions of mandibular anterior teeth., Materials and Methods: After end of the orthodontic treatment, patients were randomly assigned into the test (fixed steel retainer) or control group (modified removable vacuum-formed retainer). Periodontal parameters (periodontal probing depth: PPD; recession: REC; bleeding on probing: BOP) as well as plaque and gingival index were assessed on mandibular anterior teeth directly before attaching/handing over the retainer (baseline: BL), 6 and 12 months after orthodontic treatment., Results: 37 patients (test: n = 15, mean age: 16.1±4.2 years; control: n = 17, mean age: 17.1±5.4 years) completed the study. REC and PPD failed to show significant pairwise differences. The number of patients showing gingival health in the area of the mandibular anterior teeth (test: BL n = 10, 6 months n = 9, 12 months n = 11; control: BL n = 10, 6 months n = 16, 12 months n = 15) revealed a significant difference for the intra-group comparison between BL and 6 months in the control group (p = 0.043). The inter-group comparisons failed to show significant differences., Conclusion: Young orthodontically treated patients with fixed steel retainers show in 73.3% healthy gingival conditions after one year which are comparable to the control group (88.2%). Gingival recessions were in a clinically non-relevant range at any time of the examination., Clinical Trial Number: DRKS00016710., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. [ZApprO versus ZÄPrO: results of a first comparative study].
- Author
-
Uzun D, de Sousa T, Görl S, Brandt S, Giraki M, Petsos H, Blauhut T, Heitkamp S, Begic A, Obreja K, Sayahpour B, Bühling S, Plein N, Möltner A, Gerhardt-Szép S, and Zahn T
- Subjects
- Humans, Germany, Surveys and Questionnaires, Curriculum, Education, Dental, Educational Measurement methods
- Abstract
Background: More than 60 years after the enactment of the first Licensing Regulations for Dentists (ZÄPrO), a new Licensing Regulations for Dentists, the ZApprO, was implemented in 2020. The aims of this study were to evaluate and compare the "Course in Technical Propaedeutics" (TPK) with the course "Dental Propaedeutics with a Focus on Dental Technology" (ZPDT), which are based on different legal foundations., Methods: The following parameters were compared after completion of the courses: (1) theoretical and practical knowledge, (2) regular department-internal learner evaluation, and (3) special evaluation of learning conditions by the learners and (4) by the instructors. The theoretical and practical exams and the questionnaires were analyzed in terms of their test-statistical characteristics (difficulty, discrimination index, internal consistency). Group comparisons between TPK and ZPDT were conducted using t‑tests for independent groups., Results: Significant differences were only detected in the students' evaluation of their learning conditions, with theoretical and practical knowledge transfer being rated lower in the TPK than in the ZPDT., Discussion: The comparable results of the knowledge assessments and the regular learner evaluation, triangulated with the comprehensive learner and instructor evaluation, allowed a broad assessment of both courses. The significant differences identified provide opportunities for optimization of the newly implemented ZPDT course., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Long-term stability of infrabony defects treated with enamel matrix derivative alone: A retrospective two-centre cohort study.
- Author
-
Koronna I, Schacher B, Dahmer I, Nickles K, Sonnenschein SK, Kim TS, Eickholz P, and Petsos H
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Middle Aged, Treatment Outcome, Follow-Up Studies, Retrospective Studies, Cohort Studies, Periodontal Pocket surgery, Guided Tissue Regeneration, Periodontal methods, Periodontal Attachment Loss surgery, Periodontal Attachment Loss drug therapy, Tooth Loss surgery, Alveolar Bone Loss surgery, Gingival Recession surgery, Dental Enamel Proteins therapeutic use
- Abstract
Aim: To assess the long-term stability of attachment gain in infrabony defects (IBDs) 10 years after regenerative treatment with an enamel matrix derivative (EMD) alone., Materials and Methods: Two centres (Frankfurt [F] and Heidelberg [HD]) invited patients for re-examination 120 ± 12 months after regenerative therapy. Re-examination included clinical examination (periodontal probing depths (PPD), vertical clinical attachment level (CAL), plaque index (PlI), gingival index (GI), plaque control record, gingival bleeding index and periodontal risk assessment) and review of patient charts (number of supportive periodontal care [SPC] visits)., Results: Both centres included 52 patients (29 female; median baseline age: 52.0 years; lower/upper quartile: 45.0/58.8 years; eight smokers), each contributing one IBD. Nine teeth were lost. For the remaining 43 teeth, regenerative therapy showed significant CAL gain after 1 year (3.0; 2.0/4.4 mm; p < .001) and 10 years (3.0; 1.5/4.1 mm; p < .001) during which CAL remained stable (-0.5; -1.0/1.0 mm; p = 1.000) after an average SPC of 9 years. Mixed-model regression analyses revealed a positive association of CAL gain from 1 to 10 years with CAL 12 months post operation (logistic: p = .01) as well as a higher probability for CAL loss with an increasing vertical extent of a three-walled defect component (linear: p = .008). Cox proportional hazard analysis showed a positive association between PlI after 12 months and tooth loss (p = .046)., Conclusion: Regenerative therapy of IBDs showed stable results over 9 years. CAL gain is associated with CAL after 12 months and decreasing initial defect depth in a three-walled defect morphology. Tooth loss is associated with PlI 12 months post operation., Clinical Trial Number: DRKS00021148 (URL: https://drks.de)., (© 2023 The Authors. Journal of Clinical Periodontology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. In vitro efficacy of non-surgical and surgical implant surface decontamination methods in three different defect configurations in the presence or absence of a suprastructure.
- Author
-
Korello K, Eickholz P, Zuhr O, Ratka C, and Petsos H
- Subjects
- Humans, Decontamination methods, Surface Properties, Microscopy, Electron, Scanning, Powders, Dental Implants, Peri-Implantitis therapy
- Abstract
Objectives: Analysis of the in vitro efficacy of non-surgical and surgical dental implant surface decontamination with or without suprastructure., Materials and Methods: Three hundred and sixty implants were dipped in indelible red and distributed to 30°, 60°, or 90° angulated bone defect models. One hundred and twenty implants were used for each bone defect, 40 of which were assigned to a decontamination method (CUR: curette; SOSC: soundscaler; APA: air powder abrasion). Of these, 20 were subjected to a simulated non-surgical (NST) or surgical treatment (ST), with/without mucosa mask, of which 10 were carried out with (S+) or without (S-) suprastructure. Uncleaned implant surface was assessed by both-sided implant surface photography. Surface morphology changes were analyzed using scanning electron microscopy (SEM)., Results: Cleaning efficacy was significantly better within NST if the suprastructure was removed (p < 0.001). No significant difference was found within ST (p = 0.304). Overall, cleaning efficacy in the order APA > SOSC>CUR decreased significantly (p < 0.0001) for both S+ and S- in NST as well as ST. Separated by NST/ST, S+/S-, defect angulation and decontamination method, only isolated significant differences in cleaning efficacy were present. Linear regression analysis revealed significant associations of remnants with the treatment approach, decontamination method, and defect angle (p < 0.0001). SEM micrographs showed serious surface damage after use of CUR and SOSC., Conclusions: Suprastructure removal is an additional option to improve cleaning efficacy of non-surgical implant surface decontamination in this in vitro model., (© 2023 The Authors. Clinical Implant Dentistry and Related Research published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Oral health-related quality of life and patient-reported outcome measures after 10 years of supportive periodontal care.
- Author
-
Vogt L, Pretzl B, Eickholz P, Ramich T, Nickles K, and Petsos H
- Subjects
- Aged, Female, Humans, Middle Aged, Esthetics, Dental, Patient Reported Outcome Measures, Retrospective Studies, Surveys and Questionnaires, Oral Health, Quality of Life
- Abstract
Objective: The aim of this retrospective study was to evaluate the oral health-related quality of life (oHRQoL) and patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) after 10 years of supportive periodontal care (SPC)., Material and Methods: Patients were re-examined 120±12 months after active periodontal therapy. Dental and periodontal status and oHRQoL by completing Oral Health Impact Profile-G49 (OHIP-G49) and PROMs by marking a visual analogue scale (VAS) for self-perceived esthetics (VASe), chewing function (VASc), and hygiene ability (VASh) were assessed. Patient- and tooth-related factors (age, insurance status, number of SPC, compliance, change of therapist, smoking, tooth loss, need for surgery or antibiotic intake, bleeding on probing (BOP), periodontal inflamed surface area) influencing oHRQoL and PROMs were evaluated., Results: One hundred eight periodontally compromised patients (59 female, mean age 65.4±10.7 years) lost 135 teeth during 10 years of SPC. At re-examination, 1.8% of all sites showed PPD ≥6mm. The mean OHIP-G49 sum score was 17.6±18.5, and VAS resulted in 76.0±22.5 (VASe), 86.3±16.3 (VASc), and 79.8±15.8 (VASh). Linear regression analyses identified a positive correlation with oHRQoL and/or PROMs for private insurance status (OHIP-G49, p=0.015, R
2 =0.204; VASc, p=0.005, R2 =0.084; VASh, p=0.012, R2 =0.222) and compliance to SPC (VASe, p=0.032; R2 =0.204), as well as a negative correlation for active smoking (VASc, p=0.012, R2 =0.084), increased BOP (VASh, p=0.029, R2 =0.222) at the start of SPC, and number of lost molars (VASh, p=0.008, R2 =0.222)., Conclusion: It is realistic to obtain satisfactory oHRQoL and PROM values in most of the patients after 10 years of SPC. The identified factors may help to predict patient satisfaction in the long-term course of therapy., Clinical Relevance: Systematic therapy of periodontally compromised patients provides values for oHRQoL and PROMs in a favorable range 10 years after therapy. This should encourage dentists to implement SPC in their daily routine., Clinical Trial Number: NCT03048045., (© 2023. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Additional benefit of systemic antibiotics in subgingival instrumentation of stage III and IV periodontitis with Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans: A retrospective analysis.
- Author
-
Benz L, Winkler P, Dannewitz B, Nickles K, Petsos H, Aldiri T, and Eickholz P
- Subjects
- Humans, Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans, Retrospective Studies, Periodontal Pocket drug therapy, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Chronic Periodontitis drug therapy, Chronic Periodontitis microbiology
- Abstract
Aim: To evaluate subgingival instrumentation (SI) in periodontitis stage III and IV, grade B and C with systemic antibiotics (AB) only after detection of Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans., Materials and Methods: Patients of the Department of Periodontology of Goethe University Frankfurt/Germany were screened for microbiological testing between 2008 and 2018. All patients with aggressive and generalized severe chronic periodontitis were tested. In case of positive subgingival A. actinomycetemcomitans tests, SI was combined with AB; in all other cases it was not (nAB). Clinical examinations were performed before (T0), 12.4 (9.4/15.1) weeks after SI (T1), and at the last supportive periodontal care (T2; 3.1 [1.4/5.5] years after T1). Results at T1/T2 were assessed as "treat-to-target" endpoint (≤4 sites with probing pocket depths ≥5 mm)., Results: Four-hundred and twenty-five patients (280 stage III/145 stage IV, 95 grade B/330 grade C) provided complete data (AB 144/nAB 281) for T0 and T1, and 332 (AB 121/nAB 211) for T2. At T1/T2, AB resulted in 53 (37%)/76 (63%) patients with "treat-to-target" endpoint, and nAB in 76 (27%)/91 (43%) (p = .038/.001)., Conclusions: In periodontitis stage III and IV, grade B and C with subgingival A. actinomycetemcomitans infection, SI with AB resulted in higher rate of "treat-to-target" endpoint than exclusive SI in patients without the infection., (© 2023 The Authors. Journal of Clinical Periodontology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Esthetic and clinical outcomes after immediate placement and restoration: Comparison of two implant systems in the anterior maxilla-A cross-sectional study.
- Author
-
Parvini P, Trimpou G, Begic A, Cafferata EA, Petsos H, Müller KM, Schwarz F, Eickholz P, and Obreja K
- Subjects
- Humans, Treatment Outcome, Cross-Sectional Studies, Maxilla surgery, Esthetics, Dental, Dental Implantation, Endosseous methods, Immediate Dental Implant Loading methods, Dental Implants, Dental Implants, Single-Tooth
- Abstract
Aim: To assess the esthetic and clinical performance of a novel self-tapping implant system for single-tooth restorations in the esthetic zone after immediate placement and provisionalization., Materials and Methods: This cross-sectional study included 52 patients contributing a total of 52 immediately placed and restored implants with ≥12 months after functional loading, comparing two different implant systems: Straumann® BLX (Institut Straumann AG, Basel, Switzerland; 25 patients) and Ankylos® (Dentsply Sirona, Hanau, Germany; 27 patients). As the primary outcome measure, peri-implant tissue esthetics were assessed by means of pink esthetics score (PES) rated by three independent clinicians. Moreover, as secondary outcome measures, the peri-implant tissue health was assessed by means of bleeding on probing, probing depth, and suppuration. Apart from that, the modified plaque index, keratinized mucosa width, and the presence of mucosal recessions were also assessed. When clinical signs suggested the possibility of peri-implantitis, radiographs were indicated to assess progressive bone loss., Results: The mean PES ratings were 12.10 ± 1.10 for Ankylos versus 11.2 ± 1.86 for BLX, both achieving good esthetic results without significant differences (p = 0.143). There were no differences among most clinical parameters (plaque, bleeding on probing, probing depth, peri-implant mucosal recession), although peri-implant mucositis was present in one-third of the cases. The inter-rater agreement on esthetics was not significant (p < 0.250)., Conclusion: Within the limitations of the present study, it was concluded that the use of either BLX or Ankylos implant systems was associated to comparable peri-implant health and good pink esthetic outcomes during immediate implantation and restoration protocols, for at least 12 months., (© 2022 Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Development and international validation of logistic regression and machine-learning models for the prediction of 10-year molar loss.
- Author
-
Troiano G, Nibali L, Petsos H, Eickholz P, Saleh MHA, Santamaria P, Jian J, Shi S, Meng H, Zhurakivska K, Wang HL, and Ravidà A
- Subjects
- Humans, Bayes Theorem, Logistic Models, Neural Networks, Computer, Molar, Periodontitis, Artificial Intelligence, Machine Learning, Tooth Loss
- Abstract
Aim: To develop and validate models based on logistic regression and artificial intelligence for prognostic prediction of molar survival in periodontally affected patients., Materials and Methods: Clinical and radiographic data from four different centres across four continents (two in Europe, one in the United States, and one in China) including 515 patients and 3157 molars were collected and used to train and test different types of machine-learning algorithms for their prognostic ability of molar loss over 10 years. The following models were trained: logistic regression, support vector machine, K-nearest neighbours, decision tree, random forest, artificial neural network, gradient boosting, and naive Bayes. In addition, different models were aggregated by means of the ensembled stacking method. The primary outcome of the study was related to the prediction of overall molar loss (MLO) in patients after active periodontal treatment., Results: The general performance in the external validation settings (aggregating three cohorts) revealed that the ensembled model, which combined neural network and logistic regression, showed the best performance among the different models for the prediction of MLO with an area under the curve (AUC) = 0.726. The neural network model showed the best AUC of 0.724 for the prediction of periodontitis-related molar loss. In addition, the ensembled model showed the best calibration performance., Conclusions: Through a multi-centre collaboration, both prognostic models for the prediction of molar loss were developed and externally validated. The ensembled model showed the best performance in terms of both discrimination and validation, and it is made freely available to clinicians for widespread use in clinical practice., (© 2022 The Authors. Journal of Clinical Periodontology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Assessment of periodontitis grade in epidemiological studies using interdental attachment loss instead of radiographic bone loss.
- Author
-
Winkler P, Dannewitz B, Nickles K, Petsos H, and Eickholz P
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Germany epidemiology, Humans, Middle Aged, Molar diagnostic imaging, Periodontal Attachment Loss diagnostic imaging, Periodontitis diagnostic imaging, Periodontitis epidemiology, Tooth, Tooth Loss
- Abstract
Aim: Comparison of grading according to radiographic bone loss (BL) or according to interdental clinical attachment loss (CAL)., Materials and Methods: In 100 periodontitis patients at the Department of Periodontology of Goethe-University Frankfurt, Germany, periodontitis grade was assigned by (i) indirect evidence using BL at the most affected tooth divided by root length and (ii) CAL at the most affected tooth divided by root length of the respective tooth type according to root length in German and Swedish cohorts. The resulting quotients were divided by age., Results: Patients (age: 53.5 ± 10.4 years; 57 females; 16 smokers; no diabetes; stage: 78 III, 22 IV) were by either method assigned to grade B or C (BL: 35 B, 65 C; CAL [German]: 23 B, 77 C; [Swedish]: 29 B, 71 C). Using root length (German cohort), agreement was 76% (kappa: 0.427; fair to good/moderate agreement) and 72% (Swedish cohort; kappa: 0.359; poor/fair agreement). Molars were most frequently chosen (BL: 64%; CAL: 71%)., Conclusions: Assignment of periodontitis grade by indirect evidence using BL or CAL using standard root length of the German cohort showed fair to good/moderate agreement. Thus, grade assignment by CAL may be used in epidemiologic studies where radiographs are not available., (© 2022 The Authors. Journal of Clinical Periodontology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Minimal periodontal basic care - no surgery, no antibiotics, low adherence. What can be expected? A retrospective data analysis.
- Author
-
Bartha V, Mohr J, Krumm B, Herz MM, Wolff D, and Petsos H
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Aged, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Data Analysis, Female, Humans, Middle Aged, Periodontal Pocket, Retrospective Studies, Dental Plaque, Tooth Loss etiology, Tooth Loss prevention & control
- Abstract
Objective: This retrospective study aimed to evaluate tooth loss and the evolution of periodontal inflammatory parameters within a strict nonsurgically treated patient cohort with < 2 supportive periodontal care visits per year, defined as minimal periodontal basic care, of 2.5 to 10.7 years., Method and Materials: Data for nonsurgically treated patients were checked for: complete periodontal examination data at baseline (T0), after active periodontal therapy (T1), and after ≥ 2.5 years of supportive periodontal care (T2); smoking, diabetes mellitus, age (at least 18 years), plaque and gingival indices, bleeding on probing, percentage of residual pockets, supportive periodontal care adherence, and number of supportive periodontal care visits were assessed as risk factors for tooth loss., Results: In total, 132 patients were included (76 female, mean age 56.7 ± 10.3 years), mean T1-T2: 4.5 ± 1.6 years. 26.5% of all patients lost 118 teeth (0.5 teeth/patient, 0.12 teeth/patient/year). Plaque and bleeding parameters were: mean plaque control record, 59.77 ± 28.07%; mean Papilla Bleeding Index, 47.46 ± 34.12%; mean bleeding on probing, 33.46 ± 21.52%. Supportive periodontal care duration (P = .013) and T2 bleeding on probing (P = .048) were identified as patient-related risk factors for tooth loss., Conclusion: Minimal periodontal basic care was characterized by elevated bleeding on probing, Papilla Bleeding Index, and plaque control record scores. This possibly highlights a lack of consequent applied surgical intervention (if needed) transitioning into regular supportive periodontal care, including insufficient patient behavioral changes regarding domestic oral hygiene procedures and possibly nonaddressed proinflammatory dietary habits as a negative effect. An apparently low tooth loss rate could be observed. The duration of supportive periodontal care was identified as a risk factor for tooth loss.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Long-Term Results after Placing Dental Implants in Patients with Papillon-Lefèvre Syndrome: Results 2.5-20 Years after Implant Insertion.
- Author
-
Nickles K, Krebs M, Schacher B, Petsos H, and Eickholz P
- Abstract
Aim: A retrospective evaluation of patients with Papillon-Lefèvre syndrome (PLS) treated with dental implants to identify factors that may influence treatment outcomes., Methods: All PLS patients with dental implants currently registered at the Department of Periodontology, Goethe-University Frankfurt (20-38 years; mean: 29.6 years), were recruited. Five patients from three families (two pairs of siblings) with a total of 48 dental implants (inserted in different dental institutions) were included with a follow-up time of 2.5-20 years (mean: 10.4 years)., Results: Implant failure occurred in three patients (at least 15 implants). Nearly all patients demonstrated peri-implantitis in more or less advanced stages; 60% of patients demonstrated bone loss ≥50% around the implants. Two patients did not follow any supportive therapy., Conclusions: Implants in PLS patients who did not follow any maintenance programme had a high risk of peri-implantitis and implant loss.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Ten-Year Stability of Clinical Attachment after Regenerative Treatment of Infrabony Defects and Controls.
- Author
-
Petsos H, Koronna I, Ramich T, Nickles K, Dannewitz B, Schacher B, and Eickholz P
- Abstract
Background: A similar long-term stable clinical attachment level (CAL) of infrabony defects (IBDs) after regenerative treatment compared to control teeth would indicate a high level of stability resulting from the regenerative approach., Methods: Patients with a regeneratively treated IBD were screened 120 ± 12 months postoperatively for eligibility for study participation, and were included if complete baseline and 12-month examinations (plaque (PlI), periodontal probing depth (PPD), CAL) were available and a respective control tooth could be identified. Re-examination included clinical examination (PPD, CAL, PlI/GI, bleeding on probing, plaque control record, gingival bleeding index)., Results: A total of 27 patients (16 females; age (median; lower/upper quartile): 57.0; 44.0/60.0 years; 6 smokers) contributed 27 IBDs (test), for each of which a control tooth was identified. Five test teeth (18.5%) were lost between 12 and 120 months. The remaining 22 test teeth revealed a significant CAL gain after 1 (2.5 mm; 1.0/4.0 mm, p < 0.0001) and 10 (2.5 mm; 0.5/3.5 mm, p < 0.0001) years, whereas control teeth were stable (1 year: 0.0 mm; 0.0/1.0 mm, p = 0.396; 10 years: 0.0 mm; -1.0/1.5 mm, p = 0.215). The study did not detect any significant CAL change between 1 and 10 years for test (-0.5 mm; -1.0/0.5 mm, p = 0.414) and control teeth (0.0 mm; -1.0/1.0 mm, p = 0.739). In 15 patients, test and control teeth revealed stable CAL values between 12 and 120 months., Conclusion: Regenerative treatment of IBDs exhibited stability comparable to non-surgically treated, periodontally reduced sites over a 10-year period.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Tooth loss in periodontally compromised patients: Retrospective long-term results 10 years after active periodontal therapy - tooth-related outcomes.
- Author
-
Petsos H, Ramich T, Nickles K, Dannewitz B, Pfeifer L, Zuhr O, and Eickholz P
- Subjects
- Aged, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prognosis, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Tooth Loss, Tooth Mobility complications, Tooth Mobility therapy
- Abstract
Background: Estimating prognosis of periodontally affected teeth at the beginning of supportive periodontal care (SPC) is an important component for further treatment planning. This study aimed to evaluate tooth loss (TL) during 10 years of SPC in periodontally compromised patients and to identify tooth-related factors affecting TL., Methods: Patients were re-examined 120 ± 12 months after accomplishment of active periodontal therapy. TL was defined as primary outcome variable and tooth-related factors (abutment status, furcation involvement [FI], tooth mobility, mean periodontal probing depth [PD], and clinical attachment level [CAL] at beginning of SPC, and initial bone loss [BL]) were estimated based on an adjusted regression analyses model., Results: Ninety-seven patients (51 females and 46 males; mean age, 65.3 ± 11 years) lost 119 of 2,323 teeth (overall TL [OTL]: 0.12 teeth/patient/y) during 10 years of SPC. Forty of these teeth (33.6%) were lost for periodontal reasons (TLP; 0.04 teeth/patient/y). Significantly more teeth were lost due to other reasons (P <0.0001). TLP (OTL) only occurred in 5.9% (14.7%) of all teeth, when BL was at least 80%. Use as abutment tooth, FI degree III, tooth mobility degrees I and II, mean PD, and CAL positively correlated with OTL (P <0.05). For TLP, FI and tooth mobility degree III as well as mean CAL were identified as tooth-related prognostic factors (P <0.05)., Conclusions: During 10 years of SPC, most of the teeth (93.4%) of periodontally compromised patients were retained, showing the positive effect of a well-established treatment concept. Well-known tooth-related prognostic factors were confirmed., (© 2021 The Authors. Journal of Periodontology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Academy of Periodontology.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Long-term prognosis of teeth with class III furcation involvement.
- Author
-
Eickholz P, Runschke M, Dannewitz B, Nickles K, Petsos H, Kronsteiner D, and Pretzl B
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Middle Aged, Molar, Prognosis, Retrospective Studies, Furcation Defects diagnostic imaging, Furcation Defects therapy, Tooth Loss
- Abstract
Objective: Evaluation of survival of teeth with class III furcation involvement (FI) ≥5 years after active periodontal treatment (APT) and identification of prognostic factors., Methods: All charts of patients who completed APT at the Department of Periodontology of Goethe-University Frankfurt, Germany, beginning October 2004 were screened for teeth with class III FI. APT had to be accomplished for ≥5 years. Charts were analysed for data of class III FI teeth at baseline (T0), at accomplishment of APT (T1), and at the last supportive periodontal care (T2). Baseline radiographic bone loss (RBL) and treatment were assessed., Results: One-hundred and sixty patients (age: 54.4 ± 9.8 years; 82 females; 39 active smokers; 9 diabetics, 85 stage III, 75 stage IV, 59 grade B, 101 grade C) presented 265 teeth with class III FI. Ninety-eight teeth (37%) were lost during 110, 78/137 (median, lower/upper quartile) months. Logistic mixed-model regression and mixed Cox proportional hazard model associated adjunctive systemic antibiotics with fewer tooth loss (26% vs. 42%; p = .019/.004) and RBL (p = .014/.024) and mean probing pocket depth (PPD) at T1 (p < .001) with more tooth loss., Conclusions: Subgingival instrumentation with adjunctive systemic antibiotics favours retention of class III furcation-involved teeth. Baseline RBL and PPD at T1 deteriorate long-term prognosis., (© 2021 The Authors. Journal of Clinical Periodontology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Retrospective long-term analysis of tooth loss over 20 years in a specialist practice setting: Periodontally healthy/gingivitis and compromised patients.
- Author
-
Junge T, Topoll H, Eickholz P, and Petsos H
- Subjects
- Adult, Esthetics, Dental, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Young Adult, Gingivitis, Periodontitis complications, Periodontitis therapy, Tooth Loss
- Abstract
Objective: To assess tooth loss (TL) in initially periodontally healthy/gingivitis (PHG) and periodontally compromised (PC) individuals during a 15- to 25-year follow-up in a specialist practice and to identify the factors influencing TL., Materials and Methods: Patients were re-examined 240 ± 60 months after active periodontal therapy (PC) or initial examination (PHG). PHG patients were periodontally healthy or had gingivitis, and PC patients exhibited at least stage II periodontitis. TL, patient-related outcomes, and risk factors for TL were assessed at the patient level (group-relation, gender, age, smoking, bleeding on probing, educational status, mean number of visits/year)., Results: Fifty-six PC patients receiving regular supportive periodontal care (12 female, mean age 49.1 ± 10.9 years, stage II: 10, stage III/IV: 46) lost 38 teeth (0.03 ± 0.05 teeth/year). Fifty-one PHG patients (23 female, mean age 34.5 ± 12.4 years) following regular oral prevention lost 39 teeth (0.04 ± 0.05 teeth/year) (p = .631). Both PC and PHG groups did not show any significant differences regarding visual analogue scale measurements [aesthetics (p = .309), chewing function (p = .362), hygiene (p = .989)] and overall Oral Health Impact Profile (p = .484). Age at the start of follow-up was identified as a risk factor for TL (p < .0001)., Conclusion: PC and PHG patients exhibited similarly small TL rates over 240 ± 60 months, which should, however, be interpreted with caution in view of the group heterogeneity. Clinical trial number: DRKS00018840 (URL: https://drks.de)., (© 2021 The Authors. Journal of Clinical Periodontology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Tunnel technique with connective tissue graft versus coronally advanced flap with enamel matrix derivate for root coverage: 5-year results of an RCT using 3D digital measurement technology for volumetric comparison of soft tissue changes.
- Author
-
Zuhr O, Akakpo D, Eickholz P, Vach K, Hürzeler MB, and Petsos H
- Subjects
- Connective Tissue, Esthetics, Dental, Gingiva surgery, Humans, Technology, Tooth Root diagnostic imaging, Tooth Root surgery, Treatment Outcome, Dental Enamel Proteins therapeutic use, Gingival Recession surgery
- Abstract
Aim: Comparison of the clinical efficacy (digitally volumetric, aesthetic, patient-centred outcomes) of tunnel technique (TUN) with subepithelial connective tissue graft (CTG) versus coronally advanced flap (CAF) with enamel matrix derivate (EMD) 5 years after gingival recession therapy., Materials and Methods: In 18 patients contributing 36 RT1 recessions, study models were collected at baseline and follow-ups. Optical scans assessed recessions computer-assisted [recession depth, recession reduction (RECred), complete root coverage (CRC), percentage of root coverage (RC), pointwise (pTHK) and mean areal (aTHK) marginal soft tissue thickness]. Root coverage aesthetic Score (RES) was used for aesthetic evaluation and visual analogue scales for patient-centred data collection applied., Results: Sixty months after surgery, 50.0% (TUN+CTG) and 0.0% (CAF+EMD) of sites showed CRC (p = 0.0118), 82.2% (TUN+CTG) and 32.0% (CAF+EMD) achieved RC, respectively (p = 0.0023). CTG achieved significantly better RECred (TUN+CTG: 1.75±0.74 mm; CAF+EMD: 0.50 ± 0.39 mm; p = 0.0009) and aTHK (TUN+CTG: 0.95 ± 0.41 mm; CAF+EMD: 0.26 ± 0.28 mm; p = 0.0013). RES showed superior outcomes (p = 0.0533) for TUN+CTG (6.86 ± 2.31) compared to CAF+EMD (4.63 ± 1.99). The study failed to find significant differences related to patient-centred outcomes (TUN+CTG: 8.30 ± 2.21; CAF+EMD: 7.50 ± 1.51; p = 0.1136)., Conclusions: Five years after treatment, CTG resulted in better clinical and aesthetic outcomes than CAF+EMD. Increased THK was associated with improved outcomes for RECred and RC., (© 2021 The Authors. Journal of Clinical Periodontology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Impact of 0.1% octenidine mouthwash on plaque re-growth in healthy adults: a multi-center phase 3 randomized clinical trial.
- Author
-
Jockel-Schneider Y, Schlagenhauf U, Petsos H, Rüttermann S, Schmidt J, Ziebolz D, Wehner C, Laky M, Rott T, Noack M, Noack B, and Lorenz K
- Subjects
- Adult, Chlorhexidine, Dental Plaque Index, Double-Blind Method, Humans, Imines, Mouthwashes, Pyridines, Anti-Infective Agents, Local, Gingivitis
- Abstract
Objectives: To investigate plaque inhibition of 0.1% octenidine mouthwash (OCT) vs. placebo over 5 days in the absence of mechanical plaque control., Materials and Methods: For this randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind, parallel group, multi-center phase 3 study, 201 healthy adults were recruited. After baseline recording of plaque index (PI) and gingival index (GI), collection of salivary samples, and dental prophylaxis, subjects were randomly assigned to OCT or placebo mouthwash in a 3:1 ratio. Rinsing was performed twice daily for 30 s. Colony forming units in saliva were determined before and after the first rinse. At day 5, PI, GI, and tooth discoloration index (DI) were assessed. Non-parametric van Elteren tests were applied with a significance level of p < 0.05., Results: Treatment with OCT inhibited plaque formation more than treatment with placebo (PI: 0.36 vs. 1.29; p < 0.0001). OCT reduced GI (0.04 vs. placebo 0.00; p = 0.003) and salivary bacterial counts (2.73 vs. placebo 0.24 lgCFU/ml; p < 0.0001). Tooth discoloration was slightly higher under OCT (DI: 0.25 vs. placebo 0.00; p = 0.0011). Mild tongue staining and dysgeusia occurred., Conclusions: OCT 0.1% mouthwash inhibits plaque formation over 5 days. It therefore can be recommended when regular oral hygiene is temporarily compromised., Clinical Relevance: When individual plaque control is compromised, rinsing with octenidine mouthwash is recommended to maintain healthy oral conditions while side effects are limited., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. In vitro surgical and non-surgical air-polishing efficacy for implant surface decontamination in three different defect configurations.
- Author
-
Tuchscheerer V, Eickholz P, Dannewitz B, Ratka C, Zuhr O, and Petsos H
- Subjects
- Decontamination, Humans, Powders, Surface Properties, Dental Implants, Peri-Implantitis prevention & control
- Abstract
Objectives: Evaluation of surgical and non-surgical air-polishing in vitro efficacy for implant surface decontamination., Material and Methods: One hundred eighty implants were distributed to three differently angulated bone defect models (30°, 60°, 90°). Biofilm was imitated using indelible red color. Sixty implants were used for each defect, 20 of which were air-polished with three different types of glycine air powder abrasion (GAPA1-3) combinations. Within 20 equally air-polished implants, a surgical and non-surgical (with/without mucosa mask) procedure were simulated. All implants were photographed to determine the uncleaned surface. Changes in surface morphology were assessed using scanning electron micrographs (SEM)., Results: Cleaning efficacy did not show any significant differences between GAPA1-3 for surgical and non-surgical application. Within a cleaning method significant (p < 0.001) differences for GAPA2 between 30° (11.77 ± 2.73%) and 90° (7.25 ± 1.42%) in the non-surgical and 30° (8.26 ± 1.02%) and 60° (5.02 ± 0.84%) in the surgical simulation occurred. The surgical use of air-polishing (6.68 ± 1.66%) was significantly superior (p < 0.001) to the non-surgical (10.13 ± 2.75%). SEM micrographs showed no surface damages after use of GAPA., Conclusions: Air-polishing is an efficient, surface protective method for surgical and non-surgical implant surface decontamination in this in vitro model. No method resulted in a complete cleaning of the implant surface., Clinical Relevance: Air-polishing appears to be promising for implant surface decontamination regardless of the device.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. In Vitro Efficacy of Three Different Nonsurgical Implant Surface Decontamination Methods in Three Different Defect Configurations.
- Author
-
Iatrou P, Chamilos C, Nickles K, Ratka C, Eickholz P, and Petsos H
- Subjects
- Decontamination, Humans, Microscopy, Electron, Scanning, Powders, Surface Properties, Titanium, Dental Implants, Peri-Implantitis therapy
- Abstract
Purpose: Assessment of in vitro efficacy of three different nonsurgical implant surface decontamination methods in three peri-implant bone defect simulation models., Materials and Methods: A total of 180 implants were allocated to differently angulated (30, 60, and 90 degrees) peri-implant bone defect resin models, each covered by a mucosa mask. All implants were stained with indelible red color and assigned to one of the three defect models. In each simulated bone defect group, 20 implants were decontaminated for 2 minutes with a curette (CUR), sonic scaler (SOSC), or air-powder abrasion device (APA) with glycine powder. Photos were taken from both sides of each implant to measure the percentage of uncleaned implant surface area. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) was used to assess the implant surface for morphologic damage., Results: Among the three defect angulations, a significantly different cleaning efficacy (P < .001) for each treatment method was found (30 degrees: CUR [67.33%], SOSC [62.70%], APA [39.33%]; 60 degrees: CUR [61.59%], SOSC [54.31%], APA [23.91%]; 90 degrees: CUR [66.82%], SOSC [55.77%], APA [28.03%]). SEM did not show any considerable surface damage after APA treatment in comparison with after CUR or SOSC., Conclusion: Air-powder abrasion proved to be the most efficient nonsurgical treatment device for each type of defect in this in vitro model with the least noticeable surface change. No decontamination method resulted in complete cleaning of the color remnants on the implant surface.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Five-Years Periodontal Outcomes of Early Removal of Unerupted Third Molars Referred for Orthodontic Purposes.
- Author
-
Petsos H, Fleige J, Korte J, Eickholz P, Hoffmann T, and Borchard R
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Mandible, Prospective Studies, Tooth Extraction, Young Adult, Molar, Third diagnostic imaging, Molar, Third surgery, Tooth, Impacted diagnostic imaging, Tooth, Impacted surgery
- Abstract
Purpose: The removal of third molars (M3) is one of the most common oral-maxillofacial surgical procedures affecting periodontal tissues of neighboring second molars (M2). The aim of this study was to evaluate the periodontal status of lower M2 following the removal of unerupted lower M3 up to 5 years after removal., Patients and Methods: Primary predictor variable in this prospective cohort-study was time [baseline (BL; preoperatively), 6 and 60 months postoperatively]. The primary outcome variable was probing pocket depth (PPD). Clinical attachment level (CAL) was defined as a secondary outcome variable. Plaque index (PlI) and gingival index (GI) were assessed descriptively. All variables were compared using nonparametric tests. M3 were classified as either completely bony or partially bony unerupted. Risk factors (removed M3, type of impaction, mean BL PPD≥4 mm, gender, age) were analyzed (repeated measures ANCOVA). The significance level was set at 0.05., Results: From originally 91 subjects enrolled in this study, 39 subjects (22 females; mean age: 21.6 ± 2.5 years) contributing 39 M3 completed the study after 5 years. Average BL PPD significantly decreased at 6 (-0.50 ± 0.61 mm, P = .001), 60 months (-0.81 ± 0.56, P < .0001), as well as between 6 and 60 months (-0.31 ± 0.51 mm, P = .030). Corresponding CAL values decreased accordingly (BL-6 months: -0.37 ± 0.59 mm, P = .004; BL-60 months: -0.67 ± 0.55 mm, P < .0001; 6 to 60 months: -0.34 ± 0.48 mm, P = .004). The was confirmed as risk factor for PPD (P = .026) and CAL (P = .042) changes., Conclusions: Average PPD and CAL of mandibular M2 in young subjects improved 5 years after early removal of unerupted M3 in favor of an initial partially bony unerupted type of impaction., (Copyright © 2020 American Association of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Retrospectively analysed tooth loss in periodontally compromised patients: Long-term results 10 years after active periodontal therapy-Patient-related outcomes.
- Author
-
Petsos H, Schacher B, Ramich T, Nickles K, Dannewitz B, Arendt S, Seidel K, and Eickholz P
- Subjects
- Aged, Female, Humans, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Smoking, Treatment Outcome, Periodontitis complications, Tooth Loss etiology
- Abstract
Background and Objective: Long-term tooth retention is the ultimate goal of periodontal therapy. Aim of this study was to evaluate tooth loss (TL) during 10 years of supportive periodontal therapy (SPT) in periodontal compromised patients and to identify factors influencing TL on patient level., Material and Methods: Patients were re-examined 120 ± 12 months after active periodontal therapy. TL and risk factors [smoking, initial diagnosis, SPT adherence, interleukin-1 polymorphism, cardiovascular diseases, age at baseline, bleeding on probing (BOP), change of practitioner, insurance status, number of SPT, marital and educational status] influencing TL on patient level were assessed., Results: One-hundred patients (52 female, mean age 65.6 ± 11 years) lost 121 of 2428 teeth (1.21 teeth/patient; 0.12 teeth/patient/y) during 10 years of SPT. Forty-two of these were lost for periodontal reasons (0.42 teeth/patient; 0.04 teeth/patient/y). Significantly more teeth were lost due to other reasons (P < .001). Smoking, baseline severity of periodontitis, non-adherent SPT, positive interleukin-1 polymorphism, marital and educational status, private insurance, older age at baseline and BOP, small number of SPT were identified as patient-related risk factors for TL (P < .05)., Conclusion: During 120 ± 12 months of SPT, only a small number of teeth was lost in periodontally compromised patients showing the positive effect of a well-established periodontal treatment concept. The remaining risk for TL should be considered using risk-adopted SPT allocation., (© 2020 The Authors. Journal of Periodontal Research published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Tunnel technique with connective tissue graft versus coronally advanced flap with enamel matrix derivate for root coverage: 2-year results of an RCT using 3D digital measuring for volumetric comparison of gingival dimensions.
- Author
-
Zuhr O, Rebele SF, Vach K, Petsos H, and Hürzeler MB
- Subjects
- Connective Tissue, Gingiva surgery, Humans, Tooth Root diagnostic imaging, Tooth Root surgery, Treatment Outcome, Dental Enamel Proteins, Gingival Recession surgery
- Abstract
Aim: The aim of this randomized clinical trial was to compare clinical and volumetric outcomes of tunnel technique (TUN) with subepithelial connective tissue graft (CTG) versus coronally advanced flap (CAF) with enamel matrix derivate (EMD) 2 years after gingival recession (GR) treatment., Materials and Methods: Twenty-three patients contributed 45 Miller class I or II GR. At baseline and follow-up examinations, study models were collected. Their three-dimensional scans allowed precise computer-assisted measurement of recession depth (REC), complete root coverage (CRC), percentage of root coverage (RC), pointwise (pTHK) and mean areal (aTHK) marginal soft tissue thickness. Clinical examination delivered probing depths (PPD) and height of keratinized tissue., Results: 24 months after surgery, digitally evaluated CRC was present in 60.0% of the TUN + CTG and 0.0% of the CAF + EMD-treated sites (p < .0001), meaning a certain relapse of the gingival margin ragarding both approaches. RC amounted to 94.0% (TUN + CTG) and 57.3% (CAF + EMD), respectively (p < .0001). REC reduction (RECred) was significantly higher for TUN + CTG (1.81 ± 0.56 mm) than for CAF + EMD (0.90 ± 0.45 mm) (p < .0001). pTHK and aTHK values were significantly greater in the TUN + CTG group (1.41 ± 0.35 mm and 1.11 ± 0.26 mm) than in the CAF + EMD group (0.78 ± 0.32 mm and 0.60 ± 0.26 mm) (p < .0001). Statistical analysis detected positive correlations between THK and both RC and RECred (p < .001)., Conclusions: Two years post-operatively, CTG showed better clinical and volumetric outcomes than EMD. Increased THK values were associated with improved outcomes regarding RC and RECred., (© 2020 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Comparison of two different periodontal risk assessment methods with regard to their agreement: Periodontal risk assessment versus periodontal risk calculator.
- Author
-
Petsos H, Arendt S, Eickholz P, Nickles K, and Dannewitz B
- Subjects
- Aged, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Risk Assessment, Root Planing, Dental Scaling, Periodontitis
- Abstract
Aim: To evaluate the level of agreement between the periodontal risk assessment (PRA) and the periodontal risk calculator (PRC)., Materials and Methods: Periodontal risk was retrospectively assessed among 50 patients using PRA and PRC. Both methods were modified. PRA by assessing probing pocket depths and bleeding on probing at four (PRA4) and six (PRA6) sites per tooth, PRC by permanently marking or unmarking the dichotomously selectable factors "irregular recall," "oral hygiene in need of improvement" and "completed scaling and root planing" for PRC. Agreement between PRA and PRCred (summarized risk categories) was determined using weighted kappa., Results: Fifty patients enrolled in periodontal maintenance (48% female, age: 63.8 ± 11.2 years) participated. PRA4 and PRA6 matched in 32 (64%) patients (κ-coefficient = 0.48, p < .001). There was 100% agreement between both PRC versions. There was minimal agreement of PRA6 and PRCred (66%, 28% one different category, 6% two different categories; κ-coefficient = 0.34; p = .001). PRA4 and PRCred did not match (60% agreement, 34% one different category, 6% two different categories; κ-coefficient = 0.23; p = .13). For the SPT diagnosis of severe periodontitis, PRA6 and PRCred agreed weakly (κ-coefficient = 0.44; p = .004)., Conclusion: PRA and PRC showed a minimal agreement. Specific disease severity may result in improved agreement., (© 2020 The Authors. Journal of Clinical Periodontology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Twenty-year results after connective tissue grafts and guided tissue regeneration for root coverage.
- Author
-
Petsos H, Eickholz P, Ratka-Krüger P, Neukranz E, and Nickles K
- Subjects
- Absorbable Implants, Connective Tissue, Esthetics, Dental, Follow-Up Studies, Gingiva, Guided Tissue Regeneration, Periodontal, Humans, Membranes, Artificial, Tooth Root surgery, Treatment Outcome, Gingival Recession surgery
- Abstract
Background: Evaluation of clinical long-term results 20 years after connective tissue grafting (CTG) or guided tissue regeneration (GTR) using bioabsorbable barriers for root coverage therapy., Methods: Initially, 15 patients with 38 Miller Class I and II recession defects underwent CTG or GTR according to random assignment. At baseline, 3, 120 ± 12, and 240 ± 12 months after surgery, data on probing depth, clinical attachment level, recession depth and width, amount of keratinized tissue, and bleeding on probing were obtained. Additionally, patients' smoking habits and participation in supportive periodontal therapy were investigated., Results: Eight patients contributing 23 recessions were available at the 240 ± 12 months follow-up. Three and 120 ± 12 months after therapy with CTG, significantly better root coverage was observed compared with baseline (3 months: 3.01 ± 1.74 mm; P = 0.003; 120 ± 12 months: 2.11 ± 1.86 mm; P < 0.024). GTR resulted in significantly better root coverage compared with baseline after 3 months (2.25 ± 1.89 mm; P < 0.012). Although there were no significant changes in the recession depth between 3 and 240 ± 12 months in both groups (CTG: P = 0.097; GTR: P = 0.190), 1.57 ± 2.12 mm (CTG) and 1.19 ± 2.31 mm (GTR) of the achieved coverage after 3 months were lost. CTG showed significantly better relative root coverage percentage than GTR after 3 (P = 0.026) and 120 (P = 0.038) months. This study failed to detect a significant difference in the stability of root coverage after 240 ± 12 months between CTG and GTR (P = 0.448) and patients' assessments of their treatment outcomes (P = 0.503)., Conclusion: Long-term stability of root coverage and patient-perceived esthetic outcomes failed to show significant differences between CTG and GTR at 20 years post-surgery., (© 2019 American Academy of Periodontology.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Clinical and patient-centred long-term results of root coverage using the envelope technique in a private practice setting: 10-year results-A case series.
- Author
-
Petsos H, Eickholz P, Raetzke P, Nickles K, Dannewitz B, and Hansmeier U
- Subjects
- Adult, Connective Tissue, Female, Gingiva, Humans, Middle Aged, Patient Satisfaction, Private Practice, Tooth Root surgery, Treatment Outcome, Gingival Recession surgery
- Abstract
Aim: Evaluation of long-term results after connective tissue graft (CTG) using the envelope technique and the effect on patient-centred outcomes (Oral Health Impact Profile: OHIP) in a private practice setting., Materials and Methods: Fifteen patients (11 female, mean age: 45.0 ± 8.88 years) underwent root coverage procedure using a CTG involving maxillary Miller class I teeth. Pre-operatively, 3 and 120 ± 12 months after surgery, all patients were examined, completed OHIP questionnaire, and were asked to assess improvement and their satisfaction with the results of surgery. All procedures were performed by the same investigator., Results: Recession depth at 3 months of 1.19 ± 0.93 mm was reduced to that of 0.63 ± 0.64 mm at 120 ± 12 months after surgery (p = .117). Recession width (-1.23 ± 2.27 mm) decreased as well (p = .117), while relative root coverage increased from 48.46 ± 32.18% at 3 months to 71.22 ± 30.86% at 120 months (p = .011). The number of cases with complete root coverage increased from two (15.4%) to six (40.0%) from 3 to 120 months (p = .046). OHIP score (12.07 ± 10.15) did not change after 10 years (12.13 ± 9.86, p = .889). Ten years after surgery, 12 patients (80%) reported they would make the decision again to undergo CTG transplantation., Conclusions: Within the limitations of the study design with a high risk of bias in a practice setting, long-term stability of recession reduction, OHIP and patient-perceived satisfaction remained stable over 10 years., (© 2019 The Authors. Journal of Clinical Periodontology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. In vitro efficacy of three different implant surface decontamination methods in three different defect configurations.
- Author
-
Keim D, Nickles K, Dannewitz B, Ratka C, Eickholz P, and Petsos H
- Subjects
- Decontamination, Humans, Powders, Surface Properties, Dental Implants, Peri-Implantitis
- Abstract
Objectives: Evaluation of in vitro efficacy of three different implant surface decontamination methods in a peri-implant bone defect model., Material and Methods: A total of 180 implants were stained with indelible red color and distributed to standardized peri-implant bone defect resin models with a circumferential defect angulation of 30°, 60°, or 90° (supraosseous defect). Sixty implants were assigned to each type of defect. All implants were cleaned by the same examiner. For each type of defect, 20 implants were cleaned for 2 min with one of 3 devices: curette (CUR), sonicscaler (SOSC), or air abrasion with glycine powder (APA). Thereafter, photographs were taken from both sides of each implant and the cumulative uncleaned implant surface area was measured by color recognition technique. Scanning electron micrographs (SEM) were examined to assess morphologic surface damages., Results: The cleaning efficacy as percent (%) of residual color was significantly different for each of the 3 defect angulations (p < 0.001) for each treatment device: 30° CUR: 53.44% > SOSC: 19.69% > APA: 8.03%; 60° CUR: 57.13% > SOSC: 11.4% > APA: 0.13%; and 90° CUR: 48.1% > SOSC: 13.07% > APA: 0.58%. The differences between the three different cleaning modalities within each defect type were also significant (p < 0.005). SEM micrographs showed no surface damages after the use of APA., Conclusion: Air powder abrasion is the most efficient (APA > SOSC > CUR) and less surface damaging treatment modality for each defect angulation in this in vitro model., (© 2019 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Infrabony defects 20 years after open flap debridement and guided tissue regeneration.
- Author
-
Petsos H, Ratka-Krüger P, Neukranz E, Raetzke P, Eickholz P, and Nickles K
- Subjects
- Debridement, Follow-Up Studies, Guided Tissue Regeneration, Periodontal, Humans, Membranes, Artificial, Periodontal Attachment Loss, Treatment Outcome, Alveolar Bone Loss, Periodontitis
- Abstract
Aim: Evaluation of 20-year results after open flap debridement (OFD) and guided tissue regeneration (GTR) of infrabony defects in a randomized controlled trial., Materials and Methods: In originally 16 periodontitis patients (baseline examination), periodontal surgery was performed in 44 infrabony defects. Polylactide acetyltributyl citrate barriers were randomly assigned to 23 out of these 44 defects (parallel). Ten of these patients (GTR) exhibited a second, contra-lateral defect (OFD) each (split-mouth). At baseline, 12, 120 and 240 ± 12 months after surgery probing depths, attachment level, bleeding on probing as well was Plaque Index, Gingival Bleeding Index and plaque control record were obtained., Results: Twelve patients contributing 38 defects were available at 240 months. At 12, 120 and 240 ± 12 months, both groups showed significant (p < 0.01) attachment gain (split-mouth: OFD: 12 months: 4.15 ± 2.93 mm; 120 months: 3.35 ± 2.37 mm, 240 months: 3.60 ± 2.55 mm; GTR: 12 months: 3.50 ± 2.47 mm; 120 months: 3.90 ± 2.76 mm, 240 months: 3.80 ± 2.69 mm; parallel: OFD: 12 months: 3.53 ± 2.04 mm; 120 months: 3.59 ± 2.54 mm, 240 months: 3.53 ± 2.50 mm; GTR: 12 months: 4.07 ± 2.88 mm; 120 months: 3.13 ± 2.22 mm, 240 months: 3.13 ± 2.22 mm). Seven teeth (3 OFD, 4 GTR) were lost. Only 1 patient out of 12 was kept in regular supportive periodontal therapy (SPT) over 20 years. The study failed to show significant attachment gain differences between both groups after 240 months., Conclusions: Twenty years after OFD and GTR in infrabony defects in a population with lack of regular SPT attachment gains at 12 months after surgery were stable. About 82% of the initially included teeth were still in place., (© 2019 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Effect of the Surgeon's Dominant Hand on Postoperative Periodontal Status of Adjacent Molars After Removal of Lower Third Molars.
- Author
-
Petsos H, Korte J, Eickholz P, Hoffmann T, and Borchard R
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Female, Humans, Male, Mandible, Periodontal Pocket, Surgical Flaps, Tooth Extraction, Molar, Third, Surgeons
- Abstract
Purpose: The purpose was to investigate the effect of the surgeon's dominant hand and the side (right or left) of surgical removal of third molars in the mandible on the probing pocket depth and probing attachment level on the adjacent second molars., Patients and Methods: This study included 73 patients (46 female and 27 male patients; average age, 15.9 ± 1.9 years) with 146 asymptomatically submucosal (fully covered by oral mucosa) or impacted (completely enclosed by bone) lower third molars surgically removed by a right-handed surgeon. The probing pocket depth and probing attachment level (outcome variables), as well as the gingiva and plaque indexes (other variables), were documented preoperatively and 6 months after surgical removal. Descriptive and bivariate statistics were computed, and the P value was set at .05., Results: The mean probing pocket depth decreased by 0.69 mm on the lower left second molar and by 0.64 mm on the lower right second molar over the follow-up of 6 months. The mean attachment gain was 0.45 mm for the lower left second molar and 0.40 mm for the lower right second molar. The side differences between these changes in probing pocket depth (P = .620) and probing attachment level (P = .545) were not significant. The gingival index (P = .029) and plaque index (P = .007) deteriorated significantly for the lower right compared with the lower left second molar., Conclusions: For a right-handed surgeon, the operated side had no influence on the changes in probing depth and attachment level on the adjacent second molars., (Copyright © 2018 American Association of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. The influence of professional competence on the inter- and intra-individual esthetic evaluation of implant-supported crowns in the anterior maxilla.
- Author
-
Petsos H, Trimpou G, Eickholz P, Lauer HC, and Weigl P
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Alveolar Bone Loss diagnosis, Female, Gingival Recession diagnosis, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Observer Variation, Patient Satisfaction, Statistics as Topic, Clinical Competence, Crowns, Dental Prosthesis, Implant-Supported, Esthetics, Dental, Maxilla surgery
- Abstract
Objectives: Evaluation of the influence of professional competence on esthetic predictability of implant-supported crowns in the anterior maxilla and identification of objective factors allowing predictable planning for esthetic results., Materials and Methods: Sixty patients with 82 implants in the esthetic zone were included in this study. Width of keratinized mucosa, biotype, recessions, and papilla index according to Jemt as well as radiological bone loss were assessed. Study casts and photographs were obtained. Each patient as well as people with different level of expertise (laypersons, students and dentists) rated the esthetic satisfaction after final restoration on a scale (1-10). Correlations between esthetic assessments and previously documented clinical parameters were tested., Results: The study failed to show a significant relationship between the raters' level of dental expertise and their subjective esthetic evaluation. However, patients rated themselves much more favorable than the three evaluator groups did. A comparison of the clinical parameters with the esthetic evaluation revealed significantly more favorable ratings by the lay group in the presence of a wide attached gingiva (P = 0.021) than by the other groups and by the laypersons (P = 0.002), the dentists (P = 0.003), and students (P = 0.009) in the absence of recessions. The ratio of the implant crown length to the length of the contralateral crown had a negative effect on ratings for all three groups ([laypersons P < 0.001], [students P < 0.001] and [dentists P = 0.001]). The papilla index of the mesial papilla correlated significantly with laypersons' ratings (P = 0.036)., Conclusion: Earlier investigations are confirmed. Width of keratinized mucosa is a risk factor for esthetic predictability of implant-supported crowns in the anterior maxilla in laypersons' ratings. Furthermore, there is an association between the discrepancy of lengths of implant-supported single crowns to their contralateral natural teeth and esthetic satisfaction for all expertise levels., (© 2016 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Surgical removal of third molars and periodontal tissues of adjacent second molars.
- Author
-
Petsos H, Korte J, Eickholz P, Hoffmann T, and Borchard R
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Female, Humans, Male, Molar, Periodontal Pocket, Tooth Extraction, Tooth, Impacted, Molar, Third
- Abstract
Objectives: The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of mandibular third-molar (M3) removal on periodontal health of adjacent second molars (M2). Probing pocket depths (PPD) and probing attachment levels (PAL) have been described for primary outcome. As cofactors involved, gender, complications, two suture materials and two types of impaction were chosen as secondary outcomes., Materials and Methods: Seventy-eight patients (49 female; mean age: 16.0 ± 2.0 years) with 78 asymptomatic impacted mandibular M3 were included in this study. Plaque and gingival indices, PPD and PAL were recorded prior and 6 months after surgery. Impacted teeth were classified as either fully impacted (completely within in the bone) or submucosal (fully covered by oral mucosa)., Results: Average baseline PPD was reduced from 3.3 mm to 2.6 mm after 6 months (p < 0.05). Average PAL was reduced from 3.0 to 2.5 mm (p < 0.05). Preoperative PPD ≥ 4 mm at the distolingual and distobuccal sites was positively correlated with clinical improvement (PPD: p < 0.05; PAL: p < 0.05). The impaction class was also identified as positive cofactor for PPD (p = 0.039), but not for PAL., Conclusions: Young patients may benefit from an early removal of mandibular M3, especially in the presence of certain cofactors., (© 2016 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.