Background & Aim: Non-surgical periodontal treatment focuses on the removal of bacterial plaque using manual/mechanical instrumentation. Anatomic limitations associated with the access to subgingival areas could reduce the effectiveness of a thorough instrumentation. The opportunity of endoscopic self-assessment can improve the instrumentation ability of the clinician. The aim of this pilot study was to evaluate if self-assessment by periodontal endoscope could improve quality of non-surgical instrumentation in dental hygiene students. Methods: Four dental hygiene students were randomly assigned to the Study or Control Group. Each group included a trained operator, attending the third year of course, and an untrained operator, attend-ing the second year. Participants worked with a predefined ultrasonic tip. Teeth #41 and #47 with standardized root deposits were treated on a typodonts with compromised periodontal anatomy. After the initial instrumentation (T0), the Study Group underwent a self-assessment of the root surfaces with dental endoscope (DV2, DentalView®). A second instrumentation T1 was then performed. Quantitative analysis of residual deposits after T0 and T1 was carried out for all teeth surfaces by using a dedicated software (ImageJ®). The effect of group, instrumentation, operator, tooth and surface was evaluated by means of multilevel analysis, using a mixed effects model.Results: A decrease in percentage of residual deposits between T0 andT1 was observed in both operators of Study Group. The only significant effect in multilevel analysis was the tooth #41 presenting a stronger decrease than #47 (p=0.01). Self-assessment also led to a significant increase of effectiveness in instrumentation of apical areas (p=0.04).

J. Bennasciutti, L.V. (2022). The role of periodontal endoscope in the subgingival instrumentation training. A pilot study on dental hygiene students. JOURNAL OF CLINICAL PERIODONTOLOGY, 49(S23), 86-86 [10.1111/jcpe.13635].

The role of periodontal endoscope in the subgingival instrumentation training. A pilot study on dental hygiene students

L. Valeriani
Secondo
Writing – Review & Editing
;
L. Lo Bianco
Supervision
;
M. R. Gatto
Penultimo
Data Curation
;
M. Montevecchi
Ultimo
Conceptualization
2022

Abstract

Background & Aim: Non-surgical periodontal treatment focuses on the removal of bacterial plaque using manual/mechanical instrumentation. Anatomic limitations associated with the access to subgingival areas could reduce the effectiveness of a thorough instrumentation. The opportunity of endoscopic self-assessment can improve the instrumentation ability of the clinician. The aim of this pilot study was to evaluate if self-assessment by periodontal endoscope could improve quality of non-surgical instrumentation in dental hygiene students. Methods: Four dental hygiene students were randomly assigned to the Study or Control Group. Each group included a trained operator, attending the third year of course, and an untrained operator, attend-ing the second year. Participants worked with a predefined ultrasonic tip. Teeth #41 and #47 with standardized root deposits were treated on a typodonts with compromised periodontal anatomy. After the initial instrumentation (T0), the Study Group underwent a self-assessment of the root surfaces with dental endoscope (DV2, DentalView®). A second instrumentation T1 was then performed. Quantitative analysis of residual deposits after T0 and T1 was carried out for all teeth surfaces by using a dedicated software (ImageJ®). The effect of group, instrumentation, operator, tooth and surface was evaluated by means of multilevel analysis, using a mixed effects model.Results: A decrease in percentage of residual deposits between T0 andT1 was observed in both operators of Study Group. The only significant effect in multilevel analysis was the tooth #41 presenting a stronger decrease than #47 (p=0.01). Self-assessment also led to a significant increase of effectiveness in instrumentation of apical areas (p=0.04).
2022
J. Bennasciutti, L.V. (2022). The role of periodontal endoscope in the subgingival instrumentation training. A pilot study on dental hygiene students. JOURNAL OF CLINICAL PERIODONTOLOGY, 49(S23), 86-86 [10.1111/jcpe.13635].
J. Bennasciutti, L. Valeriani, L. Lo Bianco, M.R. Gatto, M. Montevecchi
File in questo prodotto:
Eventuali allegati, non sono esposti

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11585/899274
 Attenzione

Attenzione! I dati visualizzati non sono stati sottoposti a validazione da parte dell'ateneo

Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? 0
  • Scopus ND
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? ND
social impact