The "new" periodontal disease: navigate the emerging solutions (Part 1)
In my section during the morning session, I covered: Dental Hygiene Process of Care; Risk Assessment; Interprofessional Collaborative Practice Competencies; Uncovering Systemic Conditions that influence Periodontal Disease and Oral Health - a bidirectional relationship; and Behavioral Change Agent -- Who’s in the Chair? Former Surgeon General, Dr. C. Everett Koop, said “A person is not healthy without good oral health.” Conditions and disease associated with oral health problems are tobacco use, smoking; pharmaceuticals, such as steroids, anti-epilepsy, oral contraceptives, and cancer therapy; diet, obesity, diabetes; systemic diseases; hormonal changes; systemic disease, such as autoimmune, inflammatory, HIV, osteoporosis, neutrophil disorders, and renal. In “Oral Health in America, A Report of the Surgeon General,” it states that the mouth reflects general health and well-being, as well as playing a diagnostic role. (Oral Health in America: A Report of the Surgeon General, DHHS 2000. www.surgeongeneral.gov/library/oralhealth/). It is a portal, as well as a barrier, for infections, and saliva, buccal cells and other oral components have additional diagnostic potential. In a new study, the authors identified specific biomarker and microbial signatures that are associated with gingival inflammation, interleukin (IL)-1 polymorphism. (Lee A, Ghaname CB, Braun TM, Sugai JV, Teles RP, Loesche WJ, Kornman KS, Giannobile WV and Kinney JS. Bacterial and Salivary Biomarkers Predict the Gingival Inflammatory Profile. Journal of Periodontology. 0:0, 1-13).
Maria Perno Goldie, RDH, MS
To read previous articles in RDH eVillage FOCUS from 2011 written by Maria Perno Goldie, go to articles.