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Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT03074565

Ultrasonic Versus Ultrasonic+ for Effective Sanative Therapy

Comparison of Ultrasonic Versus Hand Instrumentation Plus Ultrasonic for Effective Sanative Therapy

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
42 (actual)
Sponsor
Brock University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Periodontitis is a chronic oral infection that results in the breakdown of connective tissue and alveolar bone that support the teeth. Non-surgical sanative therapy using a combination treatment of hand and ultrasonic instrumentation is the primary treatment option for patients with periodontitis. However, the hand-held instrumentation requires continuous sharpening for optimal outcomes, which introduces tremendous variability as well as a large increase in time spent by the treating dental hygienists. Therefore, this study aimed to determine if ultrasonic instrumentation alone can provide similar improvements to periodontal outcomes compared to ultrasonic plus hand instrumentation.

Detailed description

Periodontitis is a chronic oral infection that results in the breakdown of connective tissue and alveolar bone that support the teeth. Bacteria and the body's own immune system mediate the severity of periodontitis, where teeth may become loose, fall out or have to be removed. Non-surgical sanative therapy (also referred to as "deep cleaning") is the primary treatment option for patients with generalized chronic periodontitis. This includes debridement with both ultrasonic and hand instrumentation. Using this approach, surgery is avoided for 93% of patients who undergo sanative therapy at our private periodontal specialty practice (unpublished data). However, the hand-held instrumentation requires continuous sharpening for optimal performance, which introduces tremendous variability as well as a large increase in time spent by the hygienists. Ultrasonic instrumentation does not require sharpening, as a new instrument head is used for every new patient. Therefore, given the interest in "contemporary instrumentation", meaning ultrasonic therapy alone, the primary objective of this study is to determine if similar improvements in periodontal indices can be achieved using ultrasonic instrumentation alone versus ultrasonic instrumentation in conjunction with hand instrumentation. Secondary objectives included the following: i) to determine if the time required to complete sanative therapy is reduced using ultrasonic therapy alone, given the ultrasonic instruments do not require sharpening and less instrument changes by the hygienist are required during treatment. If the time is less for ultrasonic therapy alone, there is a potential cost-savings for the patient, as well as less time spent receiving therapy in the dental chair; ii) to determine if the treatment with ultrasonic therapy versus ultrasonic therapy and hand instrumentation is more comfortable for the patient; and iii) to determine if there is less sensitivity to the teeth with ultrasonic therapy alone compared to the combination of ultrasonic therapy and hand instrumentation.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEUltrasonic aloneSanative therapy using ultrasonic instrumentation alone
DEVICEUltrasonic+Sanative therapy using ultrasonic plus hand instrumentation

Timeline

Start date
2017-05-01
Primary completion
2019-02-05
Completion
2019-02-05
First posted
2017-03-09
Last updated
2019-07-10

Locations

2 sites across 1 country: Canada

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03074565. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.