Systemic Adjuncts To Perio Treatment - Local adjuncts in the treatment of periodontitis Flashcards
For locally applied periodontal adjuncts to be effective what 3 things must they do?
- Right location
- High enough conc
- Long enough time
Agents need to be in the right location, with a high enough concentration, for a long enough period of time, to be effective
3 advantages of periodontal locally applied adjuncts
- Assured pt compliance
- as given by dent professional - Minimal systemic exposure
- less side effects - Drug levels far exceed the MIC for key periodontal pathogens
- applied directly in pockets so the concentration is high
disadvantage of periodontal locally applied adjuncts
Substantivity = time the agents are present in the local area
This can be low due to the rinsing effect caused by the gingival crevicular fluid as a result of the high levels of inflammation
Indications for locally applied adjuncts / locally delivered antimicrobials
Isolated pockets which do not react to conventional periodontal treatment, in patients with good OH
Give 3 examples of local agents
- Tetracycline
- Very effective when applied locally.
- inhibit synthesis of bacterial proteins by attaching to the surface of the bacterial ribosomes.
- Actisite (tetracyline fiber) which is applied using a FIBER in the pocket. The fiber resists the rinsing effect caused by GCF - increases Substantivity.
Fiber needs to be manually removed after use.
- Metronidazole
- Elyzol 25% Met gel - gels can get rinsed away by GCF quite easily so need to apply more.
- Chlorhexidine
- Periochip 2.5mg of chlorhexidine gluconate - uses fibres that resorb naturally