4.5 Article

Oral health-related quality of life following peri-implantitis surgery: A prospective study

Journal

CLINICAL ORAL IMPLANTS RESEARCH
Volume 33, Issue 8, Pages 858-867

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/clr.13967

Keywords

dental; oral implants; multilinear regression; OHIP; OHRQoL; peri-implant surgery; peri-implantitis

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The aim of this study was to describe long-term patient-reported outcomes following surgical treatment of peri-implantitis. The results showed that the oral health-related quality of life remained at a low level after peri-implant surgery and did not significantly change.
Aim The aim of this prospective study was to describe long-term patient-reported outcomes following surgical treatment of peri-implantitis. Methods Oral health-related quality of life (OHRQoL) of 43 patients diagnosed with peri-implantitis was recorded using the short form of the Oral Health Impact Profile (OHIP-14), where low scores indicate low impact. A Norwegian version of the OHIP-14 form was filled out 1 week before and 6-, 18- and 36 months after the peri-implant surgery. The mean and median OHIP-14 scores were calculated for its seven domains (i.e., Functional limitation, Physical pain, Psychological discomfort, Physical disability, Psychological disability, Social disability, and Handicap) across four different time points. The dataset was analyzed to find correlations between independent variables and the OHIP-scores. Results The OHIP-14 scores were at a low level from baseline to 36 months post-surgery. The mean scores at specific time points were at baseline 7.2 (SD 7.3), 6 months post-surgery 6.0 (SD 6.9), 18 months post-surgery 6.8 (SD 9.7), and 3 years post-surgery 7.0 (SD 9.4). None of these changes were statistically significant. Specific domains of OHRQoL did not significantly differ across different time points (pre- and post-surgery) in males (except for domain Handicap) or females (except for domain Functional limitation). Conclusions The reported OHIP-14 measures were initially low and stayed low up to 3 years after peri-implant surgery. This may indicate that neither the disease nor the treatment deteriorated or improved the OHRQoL.

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