scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Intraclass correlations of periodontal measurements.

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
The data suggest that the major but by no means the sole factor determining the variability of attachment level or pocket depth changes is the nature of the local factors.
Abstract
Components of variance and intraclass correlation coefficients were computed for changes in attachment level, pocket depth, gingival and plaque index scores for 5 groups of treated periodontal disease patients and 1 group of untreated subjects with periodontal disease. The intraclass correlation coefficients for attachment level change ranged from 0.011 to 0.165 (median 0.067), while intraclass correlation coefficients for pocket depth changes ranged from -0.009 to 0.178 (median 0.071). These intraclass correlation coefficients were much lower than those computed for changes in measurements of plaque which ranged from 0.086 to 0.568 (median 0.268) or gingival inflammation which ranged from 0.119 to 0.522 (median 0.264). Intraclass correlation coefficients at baseline for pocket depths ranged from 0.000 to 0.199 (median 0.053), for plaque accumulation from 0.121 to 0.531 (median 0.222) and for gingival inflammation from 0.229 to 0.596 (median 0.391). The differences in the intraclass correlation coefficients between pocket depth and attachment level on the one hand and plaque accumulation or gingival inflammation on the other could not be explained on the basis of differences in the measurement scale employed, since collapsing measurement scales had little effect on the intraclass correlation coefficients. The observed larger intraclass correlation coefficients for changes in plaque and gingival indices suggest a larger role for host contribution to these measurements. In contrast, the data suggest that the major but by no means the sole factor determining the variability of attachment level or pocket depth changes is the nature of the local factors.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Case Definitions for Use in Population-Based Surveillance of Periodontitis

TL;DR: This classification defines severeperiodontitis and moderate periodontitis in terms of PD and CAL to enhance case definitions and further demonstrates the importance of thresholds ofPD and CAL and the number of affected sites when determining prevalence.

Case Definitions for Use in Population-Based Surveillance

Paul I. Eke
TL;DR: The classification currently accepted by the American Academia of Periodontology (AAP) was devised by the 1999 Inter- national Workshop for a Classification of periodontal Diseases and Conditions as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Clinical measurements of periodontitis.

TL;DR: The detection of changes at periodontal sites from time series data has been addressed by 3 analytical procedures: regression, running medians, and tolerance, suggesting that a substantial fraction of disease active sites was not detected by these methods.
Journal ArticleDOI

Considerations in the statistical analysis of clinical trials in periodontitis

TL;DR: This paper comments, with varying degrees of emphasis, on several issues pertinent to the analysis of periodontal trials, including the ways in which measurement variability may distort analytic results.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Periodontal Disease in Pregnancy II. Correlation Between Oral Hygiene and Periodontal Condition

TL;DR: In this paper, the correlation between oral hygiene and periodontal condition was investigated in the context of pregnant women with Periodontal Disease in Pregnancy II (PDI II).
Journal ArticleDOI

Periodontal disease in pregnancy. i. prevalence and severity.

TL;DR: (1963).
Journal ArticleDOI

Comparison of different data analyses for detecting changes in attachment level

TL;DR: The tolerance and running median methods detected more breaking down sites on the molars and lower incisors and on interproximal surfaces; whereas regression analysis did not show these differences.
Journal ArticleDOI

The effect of systematic plaque control on bone regeneration in infrabony pockets.

TL;DR: A clinical trial was undertaken to test the hypothesis that periodontitis can be cured and that bone regeneration occurs in infrabony pockets in patients maintained on an optimal standard of oral hygiene, and showed that all osseous defects of the patients of the test group were refilled with bone.
Journal ArticleDOI

Results of Periodontal Treatment Related to Pocket Depth and Attachment Level. Eight Years

TL;DR: The first part of the analysis is a general appraisal of the longitudinal value of periodontal therapy related to variations in initial pocket depth, and the second part attempts to determine if treatment modality will influence the maintenance ofperiodontal attachment dependent on variations inInitial severity of the disease.
Related Papers (5)