Effectiveness of various interventions on maintenance of gingival health during 1 year – a randomized clinical trial

M.P.C. van Leeuwen, N.A.M. Rosema, P.A. Versteeg, D.E. Slot, N.L. Hennequin-Hoenderdos, G.A. van der Weijden

Research output: Contribution to JournalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Background: Rinsing with the combined use of an oxygenating-agent (OA) and chlorhexidine (CHX) in addition to mechanical oral hygiene could improve and/or maintain good gingival health over a long period. Methods: This study had an examiner-blinded, randomized, six-group parallel design consisting of two-phases: a 3-week treatment phase and a subsequent 12-month experimental phase. A total of 267 subjects in good general health (≥18 years), without periodontitis, with at least five teeth per quadrant, and with moderate to advanced gingivitis were enrolled. A 3-week treatment phase was initiated to improve gingival health. Subjects were assigned to one of the six groups: two basic oral hygiene groups (Control I & II), one professional oral hygiene instruction group (OHI), one professional prophylaxis group (PP), an OA&CHX rinse group and a group receiving a combination of all regimens (COMBI group), being OHI + PP + OA&CHX. Dental plaque, gingival bleeding and staining assessments were performed at the start of the treatment phase, at baseline and at 4, 7, 10, and 12 months. Results: There was a significant reduction in dental plaque-scores for the OA&CHX and COMBI-group (0.51 [SD = 0.37], 0.38 [SD = 0.33] respectively) and a significant reduction in gingivitis scores for the OA&CHX and COMBI group (6.9% [SD = 14.0], 13.4% [SD = 13.4] respectively) from the start of the treatment phase to baseline. No clinically relevant changes were observed for the other four groups. After baseline, bleeding and plaque-scores increased back to a non-significant level between groups, and this level remained throughout the study. Conclusion: OA&CHX and COMBI-group showed a clinically relevant improvement after the treatment phase in terms of dental plaque and gingival bleeding levels. At the 4-month clinical assessment, there was no longer a significant difference between groups.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)e16-e27
JournalInternational Journal of Dental Hygiene
Volume15
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Nov 2017

Funding

ACTA Dental Research BV received financial support from The Netherlands Organization for Health Research and Development (ZonMW). The authors designed, performed and analysed the study project without any interference from other parties. Van der Weijden, Rosema and Slot have formerly received either external advisor fees, lecturer fees or research grants from companies that produce mouthwash products. Among these were Colgate, Dentaid, GABA, Johnson & Johnson Lactona, Oral-B, Philips, Procter & Gamble, Sara Lee, Sunstar, and Unilever. All authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest.

FundersFunder number
Netherlands Organization for Health Research and Development
ZonMw

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