4.6 Review

Non-surgical therapy of peri-implant mucositis-Mechanical/physical approaches: A systematic review

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL PERIODONTOLOGY
Volume 50, Issue -, Pages 135-145

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jcpe.13789

Keywords

dental implants; disease resolution; guidelines; peri-implant diseases; randomized controlled trial

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The study aims to investigate the efficacy of mechanical/physical instrumentation in peri-implant mucositis in humans. The results showed that mechanical/physical instrumentation can alleviate symptoms and reduce gingival bleeding, but no additional advantages over oral hygiene instructions were observed. Due to the limited number of studies, the answers to other questions remain inconclusive.
AimTo study in humans with peri-implant mucositis the efficacy of (Q1) mechanical/physical instrumentation over oral hygiene instructions alone; (Q2) any single mode of mechanical/physical instrumentation over others; (Q3) combinations of mechanical/physical instrumentation over single modes; and (Q4) repetitions of mechanical/physical instrumentation over single administration. Materials and MethodsRandomized clinical trials (RCTs) fulfilling specific inclusion criteria established to answer the four PICOS questions were included. A single search strategy encompassing the four questions was applied to four electronic databases. Two review authors independently screened the titles and abstracts, carried out full-text analysis, extracted the data from the published reports and performed the risk of bias assessment through the RoB2 tool of the Cochrane Collaboration. In case of disagreement, a third review author took the final decision. Treatment success (i.e., absence of bleeding on probing [BoP]), BoP extent and BoP severity were considered as the implant-level outcomes of critical importance for the present review. ResultsA total of five papers reporting on five RCTs, involving 364 participants and 383 implants, were included. Overall, treatment success rates after mechanical/physical instrumentation ranged from 30.9% to 34.5% at 3 months and from 8.3% to 16.7% at 6 months. Reduction in BoP extent was 19.4%-28.6% at 3 months, 27.2%-30.5% at 6 months and 31.8%-35.1% at 12 months. Reduction in BoP severity was 0.3-0.5 at 3 months and 0.6-0.8 at 6 months. Q2 was addressed in two RCTs, which reported no differences between glycine powder air-polishing and ultrasonic cleaning, as well as between chitosan rotating brush and titanium curettes. Q3 was addressed by three RCTs, which showed no added effect of glycine powder air-polishing over the use of ultrasonic and of diode laser over ultrasonic/curettes. No RCTs were identified that answered Q1 and Q4. ConclusionsSeveral mechanical/physical instrumentation procedures including curettes, ultrasonics, lasers, rotating brushes and air-polishing are documented; however, a beneficial effect over oral hygiene instructions alone or superiority over other procedures could not be demonstrated. Moreover, it remains unclear whether combinations of different procedures or their repetition over time may provide additional benefits.(CRD42022324382)

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available