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PERIODONTICS
DISEASES OF THE GUM AND BONE

The presence of tartar and plaque close to the teeth is a source of continuous release of irritating and harmful bacterial substances for the tissues of the mouth. Certainly the gums also have defense possibilities: they are supplied by capillaries that carry the cells of the immune system. However, there is a physical - anatomical problem: plaque and tartar are in fact pathological structures external to the gum and cannot be reached by the defense cells of our organism. This is ultimately why plaque cannot be spontaneously removed from the body.

The prolonged presence of plaque and tartar above and subgingival results in gum disease.

 

a) GINGIVITIS

The gum is presented in a continuous state of irritation, more or less accentuated. Depending on the age of the patient, the quality of the plaque, the best or worst capillary blood supply to the gingiva, it can manifest itself with different intensity.

Gingivitis is recognized by the widespread redness, by a certain sense of soreness or burning, by the (rather frequent) presence of bleeding. Of course, in some individuals a minimal amount of plaque is enough to cause it, while others will need a larger amount.

 

b) PERIODONTITIS (PIORREA)

It is often an evolution of gingivitis. The organic defenses of the tissues (gum and bone) begin to yield, and the bacterial plaque opens its way downwards, along the root of the tooth. The gum detaches from the collar and puts the plate in contact with the underlying bone. At this point the true supporting tissue of the tooth is affected, which begins to recede downwards (apex of the root) and reabsorbs itself. The gum can also remain in place, so that what happens underneath can be overlooked by an external eye. This creates a gum pocket: a situation in which bacterial plaque continues to creep under the gum and consume the bone.

Symptoms and signs of this condition vary extremely. In particularly resistant people, the pockets may even be free from symptoms, but generally there should be widespread bleeding of the gums, some pain (even acute), heavy redness, bad odor, pus discharge, and sometimes the formation of real and own abscesses.

Not all of these signs and symptoms are present at the same time, but they still outline an ongoing disease. When the amount of bone that has been consumed reaches a sufficient level, the tooth has lost so much support that it begins to be unstable and wobble. At this point the situation can degenerate up to the total loss of the supporting bone, which will lead to the loss of the tooth.

 

c) GINGIVAL RECESSION

It is the spontaneous withdrawal of the gingival collar towards the root of the tooth. It is not necessarily about  a disease: within certain limits it can be considered physiological with age, a bit like graying hair or vision problems. Usually it alarms the patient much more than gingivitis, because it occurs preferably on teeth that have an aesthetic value and is therefore evident in its effect of lengthening the visible crown.

Patients themselves do not have on average a continuous view of their teeth and, when they discover a recession, they get very worried thinking that it has happened very quickly. Of course, the process is actually extremely slow and takes years. It is favored by not very resistant and thin gums, incorrect and too aggressive brushing, traumatic occlusion, presence of frenula (fibrous formations similar to tendons contained in the mucosa that covers the roots and which exert a "traction" action on the gum collar).

The direct consequence on the tooth is that the root is discovered, and the relative increase in the thermal or mechanical sensitivity of the tooth itself, or even the formation of abrasions on the uncovered root that have the appearance of a "hatchet blow": these problems they can be resolved with desensitizing substances or with the filling of the collar lesion.

In all cases in which the situation is judged dangerous, it is possible to stop the process or at least slow it down with a gingival graft surgery taken from the palate (or from other areas where a more rigid gum may be found). According to some operators it is even possible to cover the root by recovering the lost gum: in this case, however, the graft is placed on the bare root, without there being the possibility of regenerating even the bone, so the result has a more delicate stability over time. .

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THE THERAPY

a) HYGIENIC OR MAINTENANCE THERAPY

In the very early stages of periodontal diseases, it is possible to control the situation simply with a very careful level of oral hygiene, supported by professional hygiene sessions. Within certain limits, it is even possible to maintain stable pockets of discrete depth with only repeated professional hygiene, provided that the patient is perfectly trained in maintenance and follows a strict hygiene protocol.

 

b) GUIDED TISSUE REGENERATION (gtr)

When the pocket has reached non-maintainable depth levels, periodontal surgery is used. There are various types of intervention on the gum and they differ according to the shape of the bone lesion, the particular conditions on which it is operated. In general we can say that the ideal would be to be able to "open" the gum, clean up the bacterial invasion and regrow the lost bone: this is the "Guided Tissue Regeneration" (GTR) which is applied in many cases but not always. The so-called bone graft has more or less predictable and stable results depending on the material used to fill the defect, the shape of the defect itself, the way of covering the graft (with or without membrane). In all cases where this technique is applicable, it results in a total (or almost total) restoration of the initial situation.

 

c) RESECTIVE SURGERY

For all cases in which regenerative surgery cannot be applied, it will be necessary to assume the level of bone reached and to provide for a lowering of the gingiva, in order to preserve the tooth together with the residual supporting tissues. This more traditional technique, has a better success rate, but has the price of uncovering the tooth, which will become visually "longer", while recovering health and stability.

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