4.5 Article

Erythritol air polishing in the surgical treatment of peri-implantitis: A randomized controlled trial

Journal

CLINICAL ORAL IMPLANTS RESEARCH
Volume 33, Issue 2, Pages 184-196

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/clr.13881

Keywords

dental implant; intervention study; peri-implantitis; randomized controlled trial; surgery

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This study compared erythritol air polishing with saline cleansing of implant surfaces during surgical treatment of peri-implantitis. The results showed no significant differences between the two methods in terms of bleeding on probing, plaque score, probing pocket depth, and marginal bone loss, but a significant difference was found in suppuration on probing. Both methods resulted in low treatment success rates.
Objectives: To compare erythritol air polishing with implant surface cleansing using saline during the surgical treatment of peri-implantitis. Material and Methods: During a resective surgical intervention, implant surfaces were randomly treated with either air polishing (test group n = 26 patients/53 implants) or saline-soaked cotton gauzes (control group n = 31 patients/ 40 implants). Primary outcome was change in mean bleeding on probing (BoP) from baseline to 12 months follow-up. Secondary outcomes were changes in mean suppuration on probing (SoP), plaque score (Plq), probing pocket depth (PPD), marginal bone loss (MBL), periodontal full-mouth scores (PFMS), and levels of 8 classical periodontal pathogens. Clinical and radiographical parameters were analyzed using multilevel regression analyses. Microbiological outcomes were analyzed using the Mann-Whitney U test. Results: No differences between the test and control group were found for BoP over 12 months of follow-up, nor for the secondary parameters Plq, PPD, and MBL. Between both groups, a significant difference was found for the levels of SoP (p = 0.035). No significant effect on microbiological levels was found. A total number of 6 implants were lost in the test group and 10 in the control group. At 1-year follow-up, a successful treatment outcome (PPD<5 mm, max 1 out of 6 sites BoP, no suppuration and no progressive bone loss >0.5 mm) was achieved for a total of 18 implants (19.2%). Conclusions: Erythritol air polishing as implant surface cleansing method was not more effective than saline during resective surgical treatment of peri-implantitis in terms of clinical, radiographical, and microbiological parameters. Both therapies resulted in low treatment success.

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