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Journal ArticleDOI

Amoxicillin plus metronidazole in the treatment of adult periodontitis patients: A double-blind placebo-controlled study

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TLDR
This study has shown that systemic usage of metronidazole and amoxicillin, when used in conjunction with initial periodontal treatment in adult periodontitis patients, achieves significantly better clinical and microbiological results than initial periodental treatment alone.
Abstract
Background, aims: The aim of this double-blind, parallel study was to evaluate the adjunctive effects of systemically administered amoxicillin and metronidazole in a group of adult periodontitis patients who also received supra- and subgingival debridement. Methods: 49 patients with a diagnosis of generalised severe periodontitis participated in the study. Random assignment resulted in 26 patients in the placebo (P) group with a mean age of 40 years and 23 patients in the test (T) group which had a mean age of 45 years. Clinical measurements and microbiological assessments were taken at baseline and 3 months after completion of initial periodontal therapy with additional placebo or antibiotic treatment. Patients received coded study medication of either 375 mg amoxicillin in combination with 250 mg metronidazole or identical placebo tablets, every 8 hours for the following 7 days. Results: At baseline, no statistically significant differences between groups were found for any of the clinical parameters. Except for the plaque, there was a significantly larger change in the bleeding, probing pocket depth (PPD) and clinical attachment level (CAL) in the T-group as compared to the P-group after therapy. The greatest reduction in PPD was found at sites with initial PPD of greater than or equal to7 mm, 2.5 mm in the P-group and 3.2 mm in the T-group. The improvement in CAL was most pronounced in the PPD category greater than or equal to7 mm and amounted to 1.5 mm and 2.0 mm in the P- and T-groups, respectively. No significant decrease was found in the number of patients positive for any of the test species in the P-group. The number of patients positive for Porphyromonas gingivalis. Bacteroides forsythus and Prevotella intermedia in the T-group showed a significant decrease. After therapy there was a significant difference between the P- and the T- group in the remaining number of patients positive for P. gingivalis. B. forsythus and Peptostreptococcus micros. 4 subgroups were created on the basis of the initial microbiological status for P. gingivalis positive (Pg-pos) and negative patients (Pg-neg) in the P- and the T-groups. The difference in reduction of PPD between Pg-pos and Pg-neg patients was particularly evident with respect to the changes in % of sites with a probing pocket depth greater than or equal to5 mm. This % decreased from 45% at baseline to 23% after treatment in the Pg-pos placebo subgroup and decreased from 46% to 11% in the Pg-pos test subgroup (p less than or equal to0.005). In contrast, the changes in the proportions of sites with a probing pocket depth greater than or equal to5 mm in the Pg-neg placebo and Pg-neg test subgroup were similar, from 43% at baseline to 18% after treatment versus 40% to 12%, respectively. Conclusions: This study has shown that systemic usage of metronidazole and amoxicillin. when used in conjunction with initial periodontal treatment in adult periodontitis patients, achieves significantly better clinical and microbiological results than initial periodontal treatment alone. Moreover, this research suggests that especially patients diagnosed with P. gingivalis benefit from antibiotic treatment.

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Journal ArticleDOI

A systematic review on the effect of systemic antimicrobials as an adjunct to scaling and root planing in periodontitis patients.

TL;DR: Overall, SRP plus systemic antimicrobial groups demonstrated better results in CAL and PPD change than SRP alone or with placebo groups, and showed a statistically significant additional benefit for spiramycin (PPD change) and amoxicillin/metronidazole (CAL change) in deep pockets.
Journal ArticleDOI

Systemic Anti-Infective Periodontal Therapy. A Systematic Review

TL;DR: Systemically administered antibiotics were uniformly beneficial in providing an improvement in mean attachment level change when used as adjuncts to scaling and root planing (SRP) and were consistently beneficial, although of borderline significance, when using as adjuncting to SRP plus surgery or as a stand alone therapy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cigarette smoking and the periodontal patient.

TL;DR: The role of dental health professionals in tobacco cessation is discussed, including the use of the five A's: ask--identify tobacco users; advise--advise them to Quit; assess--evaluate the patient's readiness to quit; assist--offer assistance in cessation; and arrange--follow up on the patient’s cessation efforts.
Journal ArticleDOI

Lessons learned and unlearned in periodontal microbiology.

TL;DR: This article will review how the comprehension of the structure and function of the subgingival microbiota has evolved over the years in search of lessons learned and unlearned in periodontal microbiology and how novel systems‐biology approaches promise to unravel new details of the pathogenesis ofperiodontal diseases and hopefully lead to a better understanding of their mechanisms.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Assessment of risk for periodontal disease. I. Risk indicators for attachment loss.

TL;DR: Age, smoking, diabetes mellitus, and the presence of subgingival P. gingivalis and B. forsythus are risk indicators for attachment loss, which remain valid after controlling for gender, socioeconomic status, income, education, and oral hygiene status.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of nonsurgical periodontal therapy. I. Moderately advanced periodontitis.

TL;DR: The apparently successful results of conservative treatment of patients with 4--7 mm deep pockets in the present study raise the question to what extent nonsurgical therapy is feasible also in patients with severely advanced lesions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Survival of human dental plaque flora in various transport media.

TL;DR: It is suggested that RTF is a satisfactory medium for the transport of oral bacteria present in the samples and VMG II showed a higher recovery of organisms from these specimens with an increase in the storage period, suggesting multiplication of the plaque flora.
Journal ArticleDOI

Selective medium for isolation of Actinobacillus actinomycetemcomitans

TL;DR: With the TSBV medium, even modestly equipped laboratories will be able to isolate and identify A. actinomycetemcomitans from clinical specimens, and this bacterium from Haemophilus aphrophilus, Capnocytophaga species, and a few other contaminating organisms.
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