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Nonsurgical Periodontal Therapy

Nonsurgical Periodontal Therapy. Nield-Gehrig Chapter 19 and Perry Chaper 12. Nonsurgical Periodontal Therapy. Other terms used to describe this phase of treatment. Initial periodontal therapy Hygienic phase Anti-infective phase Cause-related therapy Soft tissue management Phase 1 therapy

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Nonsurgical Periodontal Therapy

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  1. Nonsurgical Periodontal Therapy Nield-Gehrig Chapter 19 and Perry Chaper 12

  2. Nonsurgical Periodontal Therapy • Other terms used to describe this phase of treatment. • Initial periodontal therapy • Hygienic phase • Anti-infective phase • Cause-related therapy • Soft tissue management • Phase 1 therapy • Etiotropic phase • Preparatory therapy

  3. Nonsurgical Periodontal Therapy • All chronic periodontitis patients should undergo nonsurgical periodontal therapy. • Nonsurgical periodontal therapy is frequently successful in minimizing the extent of surgery needed.

  4. Indications • Chronic Periodontitis • Gingivitis and mild chronic periodontitis may be controlled with nonsurgical periodontal therapy (NSPT) alone • Moderate Chronic Periodontitis can be controlled with NSPT alone for may others may require some spot periodontal surgery after NSPT.

  5. Indications • Severe Chronic Periodontitis control will probably require through NSPT followed by periodontal surgery. • Although periodontal surgery is frequently indicated for patients with more advanced periodontitis, all chronic periodontitis patients should undergo nonsurgical periodontal therapy prior to periodontal surgical intervention. Nonsurgical periodontal therapy is frequently successful in minimizing the extent of surgery needed.

  6. Goals • To control the bacterial challenge to the patient • Intensive training of the patient in appropriate techniques for self-care and professional removal of calculus deposits and bacterial products from tooth surfaces • Removal of calculus deposits and bacterial products contaminating the tooth surfaces. Calculus deposits ALWAYS are covered with living bacterial biofilms that are associated with continuing inflammation if not removed.

  7. Periodontitis

  8. Periodontitis

  9. Periodontitis

  10. Periodontitis

  11. Goals 2. To minimize the impact of systemic factors • Certain systemic diseases or conditions can increase the risk of periodontitis and the severity. • Plan must minimized the impact of systemic risk factors

  12. Goals 3. To eliminate or control local risk factors • Local environmental risk factors can increase the risk of developing periodontitis in localized sites. • Plaque retention in a site allow damage over time to periodontium • Local environmental risk factors should be eliminated.

  13. Components • The patients role in Nonsurgical Periodontal Therapy • Daily plaque removal • Professional Therapy • Must be customized for the individual patient • Components may included plaque control, nonsurgical instrumentation, and the adjunctive use of chemical agents

  14. Nonsurgical Instrumentation • Mechanical removal of calculus is necessary because it is a mechanical irritant and holds biofilm. • Periodontal debridement is likely to remain the most important component of nonsurgical periodontal therapy for the foreseeable future.

  15. Instrumentation Terminology • Traditional Terminology • Scaling = instrumentation of the crown and root surfaces of the teeth to remove plaque, calculus, and stains • Root Planing = treatment procedure designed to remove cementum or surface dentin that is rough, impregnated with calculus, or contaminated with toxins or microorganisms.

  16. Instrumentation Terminology • Emerging Terminology • Periodontal debridement = includes instrumentation of every square millimeter of root surface for removal of plaque and calculus, but does not include the deliberate, aggressive removal of cementum • Conservation of cementum while removing all calculus and biofilm is the goal of periodontal debridement.

  17. Instrumentation Terminology • Deplaquing = the disruption or removal of subgingival microbial plaque and its byproducts from cemental surfaces and the pocket space

  18. Instrumentation Terminology • Considerations Regarding Emerging Terminology • Periodontal Debridement is not currently a ADA procedure name. (no code) • Some authors have redefined the definition of root planing because of this.

  19. Extra Oral Fulcrum Max. Rt. Quad.

  20. Extra Oral Fulcrum Max. Rt. Quad. • Advantages • Greater parallelism of lower shank to the tooth • Greater parallelism for access to the base of the pocket • Improved access to distal surfaces and third molar • Neutral wrist position • Utilizes largermuscles of palm and forearm, meaning less operator fatigue • Proper use of this fulcrum provides stability and control of the instrument stroke

  21. Extra Oral Fulcrum Max. Rt. Quad. • Description • Establish a 9:00 position • Position patient’s head straight ahead or slightly away from operator on facials and toward operator with chin tipped upward on linguals • Use mirror to retract cheek on facial • Use direct vision and illumination when possible • Rest the backs of the fingers, not the pads or tips, firmly against the skin overlying the lateral aspect of the mandible on the right side of the face • Extend the grasp of the instrument in the hand to effectively implement an extra-oral fulcrum for mesial and distal surfaces of both the facial and lingual aspects • Rotate the instrument in the hand around the distal line angle to effectively implement the distal surfaces • Strokes are activated by pulling the hand and forearm, not by flexing the fingers

  22. Supplemental Fulcrum Max. Rt. Quad.

  23. Supplemental Fulcrum • Advantages • Neutral wrist position • Utilizes larger muscles of palm and forearm • Less operator fatigue • Added support for the removal of tenacious subgingival calculus • Reduces muscle strain and workload from the dominant hand • Added control and stability • Reduces instrument breakage

  24. Supplemental Fulcrum Max. Rt. Quad. • Description • Establish a 9:00 position • Position patient’s head toward operator with chin up • Place index finger of the non-dominant hand on the shank to apply supplemental lateral pressure to either the mesial or distal surfaces of the tooth • Fulcrum may be established on the mandibular anteriors or and extra oral fulcrum is acceptable

  25. Supplemental Fulcrum Max. Rt. Quad.

  26. Supplemental Fulcrum Max. Rt. Quad.

  27. Rationale for Periodontal Debridement • Arrest the progress of periodontal disease • Induce positive changes in the subgingival bacterial flora (count and content) • Create an environment that permits the gingival tissue to heal, therefore eliminating inflammation

  28. Rationale for Periodontal Debridement • Convert the pocket from an area experiencing increased loss of attachment to one in which the clinical attachment level remains the same or even gains in attachment • Eliminate bleeding • Improve the integrity of tissue attachment

  29. Rationale for Periodontal Debridement • Increase effectiveness of patient self-care • Permit reevaluation of periodontal health status to determine if surgery is needed • Prevent recurrence of disease through periodontal maintenance therapy

  30. Appointment planning for calculus removal • Full-mouth debridement • Full-mouth debridement is defined as periodontal debridement completed in a single appointment or in two appointments within a 24-hour period. • Since periodontal disease is an infection, the full-mouth approach to periodontal debridement is based on the assumption that the remaining untreated areas of the mouth can reinfect the treated areas.

  31. Appointment planning for calculus removal • In research studies, the full-mouth debridement procedure was combined with the use of topical antimicrobial therapy (full-mouth disinfection), It is unclear, however, if the antimicrobial therapy actually contributed to the improved results derived form the full-mouth periodontal debridement alone.

  32. Appointment planning for calculus removal • Full-mouth debridement is best accomplished by the dental hygienist working with an assistant. • Initially, patients may be resistant to the concept of scheduling one or two long appointments for the purpose of periodontal debridement. One or two long appointments, however, may in reality be less disruptive to an individual’s work schedule than four to six 1 hour appointments over several weeks. In addition, the dental hygienist should explain the rationale behind full-mouth debridement.

  33. Appointment planning for calculus removal • Planned multiple appointments. If periodontal debridement is completed in sextants or quadrants over multiple appointments, at each appointment the clinician should treat only as many teeth, sextants, or quadrants as he or she can thoroughly debride of calculus and plaque during that appointment.

  34. Ultrasonic Instrumentation • Introduction to Ultrasonic Instrumenttation • Gracey curet was the primary instrument • Now the precision-thin ultrasonic tip • Research indicates not only that the ultrasonic instrumentation is as effective as hand instrumentation, but also that ultrasonic instrumentation is as effective as hand instrumentation in the treatment and maintenance of periodontal pockets.

  35. Slim-diameter curved tips • Similar in design to a curved furcation probe • Designed fo use on: • Posterior root surfaces located more than 4mm apical to the CEJ • Root concavities and furcations on posterior tooth surfaces

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