Natural history of periodontal disease: The original Sri Lanka and Oslo studies

IF 17.5 1区 医学 Q1 DENTISTRY, ORAL SURGERY & MEDICINE
Niklaus P. Lang, Marc Schätzle, Christoph A. Ramseier
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Abstract

Susceptibility to periodontal disease depends on individual factors within the host response to the bacterial challenge. The study of these factors requires longitudinal studies of an undisturbed development of the disease process. On the basis of the original longitudinal studies on the natural histology of periodontal disease staged in Sri Lanka and Oslo/Norway, several analyses of periodontal parameters and tooth status have been performed. The main findings were that in the first 20 years of complete absence of oral hygiene practices or preventive services attachment was lost at various rates. Three groups of subjects could be identified: rapidly progressing (RP) (8%), moderately progressing (MP) (81%), and subjects with no disease progression (NP) (11%). In the second two decades, the RP subjects have lost most of their teeth and no NP patients were identified anymore. The progression rate in these two decades was much slower, and the tooth mortality decreased. It could be predicted that subjects who had lost more than 2 mm at age 30 would not maintain a functional dentition at age 60. The corresponding control population in Oslo was used to study the influence of gingival inflammation on the initiation and progression of periodontal disease. The pattern and rates of attachment loss were identified in a population that was exposed to optimal and regular preventive services from age 3 onward. In the observation period of 26 years, it could be demonstrated that gingival inflammation varied little throughout adult life and always bleeding sites occurred consistently in 10% to 20%. The role of ongoing gingivitis in the pathogenesis of attachment loss was identified and also reflected stability whenever it was absent. Tooth mortality was only found in subjects with ongoing gingivitis. After 50 years of tooth age, 63% of the teeth were still maintained, while 99.8% were maintained after 50 years when gingival inflammation had been absent. Consequently, continuous gingivitis represented a risk factor for tooth loss.
牙周病的自然史:最初的斯里兰卡和奥斯陆研究
牙周病的易感性取决于宿主应对细菌挑战的个体因素。要对这些因素进行研究,需要对疾病过程的无干扰发展进行纵向研究。在斯里兰卡和挪威奥斯陆进行的牙周病自然组织学原始纵向研究的基础上,对牙周参数和牙齿状况进行了多项分析。主要研究结果表明,在完全没有口腔卫生习惯或预防服务的头 20 年中,牙齿附着力的丧失率各不相同。可以确定三组受试者:快速进展(RP)(8%)、中度进展(MP)(81%)和无疾病进展(NP)(11%)。在后二十年中,RP 受试者的大部分牙齿已经脱落,不再有 NP 患者。在这二十年中,牙齿退化的速度要慢得多,牙齿死亡率也有所下降。据预测,30 岁时牙齿脱落超过 2 毫米的受试者到 60 岁时将无法保持功能性牙齿。奥斯陆的相应对照人群被用来研究牙龈炎症对牙周病的发生和发展的影响。从 3 岁开始定期接受最佳预防服务的人群中,确定了附着丧失的模式和比率。在长达 26 年的观察期中,可以发现牙龈炎症在整个成年期的变化很小,而出血部位始终在 10% 到 20% 之间。持续的牙龈炎在附着丧失的发病机理中的作用已被确定,而且在没有牙龈炎的情况下也反映出稳定性。只有持续牙龈炎患者的牙齿才会死亡。牙龄达到 50 年后,63% 的牙齿仍能保留,而牙龈炎症消失 50 年后,99.8% 的牙齿仍能保留。因此,持续性牙龈炎是导致牙齿脱落的一个危险因素。
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来源期刊
Periodontology 2000
Periodontology 2000 医学-牙科与口腔外科
CiteScore
34.10
自引率
2.20%
发文量
62
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Periodontology 2000 is a series of monographs designed for periodontists and general practitioners interested in periodontics. The editorial board selects significant topics and distinguished scientists and clinicians for each monograph. Serving as a valuable supplement to existing periodontal journals, three monographs are published annually, contributing specialized insights to the field.
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