In this study, the postoperative clinical and microbiologic effects of chlorhexidine toothpaste and chlorhexidine-free toothpaste with the same content were compared after bilateral mandibular impacted third molar surgery. Similarly positioned fully impacted impacted lower third molars were extracted. Bilateral impacted wisdom teeth of the patients were randomly selected. After the operation, the experimental group received Dentasave 0.2% chlorhexidine toothpaste containing chlorhexidine and the control group received toothpaste with the same content but without chlorhexidine. Teeth were extracted by the same dentist at 14-day intervals. For microbiological analysis, saliva samples were taken before the first tooth extraction, before the second tooth extraction 14 days later and on the 28th day and sent to the microbiology laboratory. Wound healing, edema and trismus in both extractions were evaluated 1 week after tooth extraction. Wound healing was evaluated as good, acceptable and poor. VAS (Visual Analog Scale) was used for pain assessment and recorded 14 days after tooth extraction.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
TRIPLE
Enrollment
22
All surgical procedures were performed by the same surgeon using the standard surgical technique described below. The anesthetic used was 4% articaine with 1:100,000 adrenaline. In all patients, a sulcus incision was made in the lower second molar and an envelope incision in the third molar region, the mucoperiosteal flap was removed, and extraction was performed with a bone elevator and a third molar elevator. If necessary, the impacted molar was incised with a high-speed dental handpiece and a fissure bur. The wound was irrigated with copious amounts of saline, and the wound edges were carefully sutured with simple 4.0 silk braided non-absorbable sutures.
Van Yuzuncu Yil University
Van, Turkey (Türkiye)
Mouth opening measurements
the distance between the incisals of the patient's central teeth at maximal mouth opening.
Time frame: 0-28 days
Facial edema
Measurement between facial craniometric points (angulus-tragus, angulus-lateral canthus, angulus-nasal base, angulus-lateral canthus, and angulus-pogonion). The number of participants in the split mouth model was 22. A total of 44 impacted teeth were extracted and edema was measured before and 1 week after each extraction.
Time frame: 0-28 days
Wound healing
View of the wound site in the operation area. The REEDA scale was used for the clinical evaluation of the intraoral surgical field. This scale It includes five factors that indicate wound healing: Redness, Edema, Echymosis, Discharge, Approximation. Each of the recovery factors is evaluated by giving scores of 0, 1, 2 and 3 and the sum of the scores obtained as a result of the evaluation of these five categories constitutes the REEDA score. The lowest score is 0 and the highest score is 15.
Time frame: 0-28 days
Visual Analog Scale
A numerical rating scale VAS was used for pain analysis (0=no pain, 10=most severe pain). The pain levels at 24 hours, 48 hours and 1 week after the surgical procedure were recorded on the patient follow-up form by all patients who participated in the study by explaining that there was no pain at the "zero" level and the most severe pain known at the "10" level on the pain scale, which was organized as a 10 cm horizontal line on the prepared forms.
Time frame: 0-28 days
Microbiological analysis
Prior to extraction, a saliva sample was collected from the patient and placed in a sterile 1.5 ml Eppendorf tube and then stored in a -40 oC freezer. After surgical extraction, the patient was given toothpaste with the same content but without chlorhexidine. After a 14-day recovery period, the saliva sample was collected again without extracting the impacted tooth on the contralateral side, and tooth extraction was performed. After the second extraction, the patient was given Dentasave 0.2% Chlorhex toothpaste. The third saliva sample was collected on day 28 (14 days after the second tooth extraction). Saliva samples were stored in sterile universal containers (Eppendorf tubes) and sent to the microbiology laboratory less than 3 hours after collection on days 0, 14, and 28 of the study.
Time frame: 0-28 days
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