Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT04623723

Influence of Scaler Tip Design on Patients' Pain Perception

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
15 (actual)
Sponsor
University of Malaya · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
20 Years – 40 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Ultrasonic scalers have been shown effective in removing subgingival calculus. However, it may cause alteration to the tooth surface as well as discomfort to patients. Advances in scaler tip designs may reduce these effects. Limited studies have investigated the influence of scaler tip designs on tooth surface and patients' comfort. This study aimed to evaluate the influence of scaler tip designs on patients' pain perception.

Detailed description

Scaling is a common procedure performed by general dental practitioners and dental specialists. Unfortunately, scaling has been associated with unpleasant dental treatment and to some extent, a painful experience (Berggren \& Meynert, 1984). Studies also have demonstrated that scaling using ultrasonic scalers can cause tooth surface roughness and tooth substance loss (Jepsen et al., 2004; Kawashima et al., 2007). Rough tooth surface will increase retention of plaque and has been shown associated with early biofilm formation (Teughels et al., 2006). Subsequently, this would increase the risk for development and progression of periodontal disease. Whereas, tooth substance loss may lead to exposed dentinal tubules, and subsequently root sensitivity. Root sensitivity was reported to affect half of patients receiving periodontal therapy (Von Troil et al., 2002). This led to discomfort among patients and avoidance to dental treatment in future. Advanced development in scaler tip designs has provided opportunities to deliver scaling treatment that is less aggressive to tooth surfaces and most importantly, to reduce the discomfort to patients. The design of the scaler tip has influenced the performance of ultrasonic scalers characterised by the displacement amplitude (Lea et al., 2003b). Displacement amplitude is the lateral movement of scaler tip that is thought to contribute to the aggressiveness of scaling procedure. Several studies have investigated the factors that may influence displacement amplitude, such as power setting and type of generator (Lea et al., 2003a), tip wear (Lea et al., 2006) and scaler tip designs (Lea et al., 2003a). However, to date, there were limited studies that investigated the effect of ultrasonic scaler tip design particularly slim and wide scaler tip on tooth surface roughness, tooth substance loss, and patients' pain perception. In a clinical setting, if there were two treatment methods that provide similar levels of effectiveness but different levels of discomfort and damage to tooth surface patient will opt for the more comfortable and conservative method. Therefore, this study investigated the influence of scaler tip designs on tpatients' pain perception following scaling.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERPS (DS-016A, EMS® Piezon, Switzerland) scaler tips. )Supragingival scaling with a portable ultrasonic scaler device (EMS®) with Piezon, Switzerland using PS (DS-016A, EMS® Piezon, Switzerland) scaler tips
OTHERConventional (FS-407, EMS® Piezon, Switzerland)Supragingival scaling with a portable ultrasonic scaler device (EMS®) with Piezon, Switzerland using Conventional (FS-407, EMS® Piezon, Switzerland)

Timeline

Start date
2017-03-14
Primary completion
2017-10-14
Completion
2017-12-14
First posted
2020-11-10
Last updated
2020-11-12

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Malaysia

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04623723. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.