Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT03451981

Non Surgical Protocol for Treatment of Peri-implantitis

Evaluation of the Adjunctive Use of Er:YAG Laser or Erythritol Air-polishing in the Non-surgical Treatment of Peri-implantitis: a RCT

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
47 (actual)
Sponsor
Università Vita-Salute San Raffaele · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Peri-implantitis is an important disease entity as a result of its high prevalence and the lack of a standard mode of therapy. Non-surgical therapy of peri-implant disease, especially when bone loss is not high, appears to be partially effective in resolving the disease. In several cases, however, only limited improvements have been reported in the main clinical parameters (bleeding at the survey and presence of the pocket) and there is a clear tendency to relapse of the disease. In these cases it is therefore recommended to consider adjunctive therapies. Numerous approaches have been used for implant surface decontamination including mechanical, chemical and treatments by means of air-powder or laser. The aim of the present randomized controlled clinical trial will be to assess the efficacy in improving clinical parameters of two further methods of implant surface decontamination (Er:YAG laser or air-abrasive device) after mechanical cleaning during non surgical treatment of peri-implantitis.

Detailed description

Peri-implantitis, defined as an inflammatory lesion in the surrounding peri-implant tissues with loss of supporting bone, is an important disease entity as a result of its high prevalence and the lack of a standard mode of therapy. Although the current epidemiological data are limited, peri-implantitis affects 28-56% of the subjects and 12-43% of the implants. Numerous approaches have been used for implant surface decontamination during peri-implant surgery, including mechanical, chemical and laser treatments. Using conventional mechanical means, eradication of pathogens on implant surfaces with threads and often with rough surface structures is difficult. Treatment models, such as debridment, effectively used to treat teeth with periodontitis, cannot be used in the same way on rough threaded implant surfaces. The implant rough surface structure also provides the bacteria with ''protected areas'', inaccessible to conventional mechanical removal. A treatment protocol that may offer an advantage over traditional mechanical treatment includes the use of laser therapy. Data have shown that treatments with Er:YAG lasers have a bactericidal effect. Er:YAG laser treatment can debride the implant surface effectively and safely. Slightly better clinical results in terms of bleeding on probing and clinical attachment level have been reported by Er:YAG laser treatment as compared with traditional non-surgical mechanical debridement with curette and chlorhexidine. The air abrasive method for the removal of bacterial plaque on tooth surfaces has also been used in the treatment of peri-implantitis, demonstrating no relevant adverse effects. Until recently, air-polishing devices have used a slurry of water and sodium bicarbonate (NaHCO3) and pressurized air/water. A less abrasive method using an amino acid glycine has been proven to be effective in removing bacterial biofilm structures in deep periodontal pockets and safe by not causing emphysema. Moreover the use of a glycine-based powder does not seem to cause titanium implant surface changes. The aim of the present randomized controlled clinical trial will be to assess the efficacy in improving clinical parameters of two further methods of implant surface decontamination (Er:YAG laser or air-abrasive device) after mechanical cleaning during non surgical treatment of peri-implantitis.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
PROCEDUREmechanical instrumentationmechanical debridement: Inflammatory tissue, excess cement or plaque deposits will be removed using hand instruments (titanium curettes) and the implant surface will be cleaned
PROCEDUREEr:YAG lasermechanical debridement: Inflammatory tissue, excess cement or plaque deposits will be removed using hand instruments (titanium curettes) and the implant surface will be cleaned. Furthermore, Er:YAG laser treatment will be provided on the implant surface.
PROCEDUREAir Powdermechanical debridement: Inflammatory tissue, excess cement or plaque deposits will be removed using hand instruments (titanium curettes) and the implant surface will be cleaned. Furthermore, an Air-Powder treatment will be provided on the implant surface.

Timeline

Start date
2018-12-02
Primary completion
2021-10-06
Completion
2021-10-06
First posted
2018-03-02
Last updated
2025-12-29

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Italy

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03451981. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.