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Mobile Health on Improving Efficacy of Plaque Control in Antenatal Women With Gingivitis

P

Postgraduate Institute of Dental Sciences Rohtak

Status

Not yet enrolling

Conditions

Pregnancy Gingivitis

Treatments

Behavioral: Mobile health
Procedure: Phase I Therapy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06997757
shefaliperiopgids

Details and patient eligibility

About

Oral health education, behavioral therapy and counselling to improve home care in pregnant females along with periodontal therapy can be helpful in treating pregnancy associated gingivitis and pregnancy outcomes

Full description

Pregnancy gingivitis has been extensively documented in the previous literature with prevalence of 36-100%. It has been reported that gingivitis is clinically seen in all the pregnant women with increase in gingival changes from 2nd to 8th month of gestation and decreasing in 9th month and post childbirth. The heightened inflammatory response of gingiva towards local irritants is believed to be responsible for the pregnancy gingivitis and has been correlated with the dose-dependent influence of female sex hormones during pregnancy. It has been suggested the increased levels of progesterone exert changes in the microvascular system of gingiva which may aggravate gingivitis. Change in the hormonal level during pregnancy have been found to be predisposing a factor for periodontal changes while Plaque acts as a precipitating factor for pathologic changes.All individuals develop gingivitis in absence of all oral hygiene measures and in healthy individuals a meticulous regime of daily plaque removal can prevent and cure the gingivitis. Since gingivitis is reversible there is a common misconception that a prolonged state of gingival inflammation during pregnancy causes no harm. It causes patient discomfort while brushing and its severity continues to increase during pregnancy. The potential for bacteremia and increased levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines may make effective treatment of gingivitis during pregnancy important for overall maternal and fetal health. In women having pregnancy associated gingivitis, who received periodontal therapy before 28weeks of gestation reported less incidence of Pre-term Labour and Low Birth Weight as compared to women who didn't receive any therapy. Therefore, oral health education, behavioural and counselling to improve home care in pregnant females along with periodontal therapy can be helpful in treating pregnancy associated gingivitis and pregnancy outcomes. Mobile Health is defined by WHO as "a term used for medical and publication health practice supported by mobile devices, such as mobile phones, patient monitoring devices, Personal Digital Assistants (PDAs), and other wireless devices." India has 1.15 billion mobile phone subscribers with 625 million urban & 524 million rural subscribers. India also has the second highest mobile phone connectivity in the world which makes the use of Mobile health in healthcare ideal. Mobile Health can be an effective and valuable treatment as it offers real-time communication between patient and doctor. Mobile health has shown promising results in the medical field Mobile health applications have been found to be an effective adjunctive intervention in self -management by patients with type 2 diabetes. Use of mHealth as an adjunct component in managing gingivitis and in improving daily self-performed oral hygiene has been documented in previous literature.

Research shows that regular prompts and reminders effectively promote and reinforce healthy habits. The average time to form a habit is 66 days with the range of (18- 254days). Improvement in performing oral hygiene has been seen in periodontal patients due to repetition and reinforcement of oral hygiene instructions. It has been documented that text messages are effective in promoting behavioural changes in chronic diseases. Text messages play a key role in encouraging behavioural change and improving health knowledge by offering guidance, warnings, reminders, positive reinforcement and feedback.

Text messaging has been proven in the prevention and management of weight loss, smoking cessation and diabetes. Study has reported higher satisfaction levels among pregnant women who received text messages about prenatal care than those who only received standard prenatal care.

So, in the view of current literature we hypothesise that mobile health reinforcements can contribute to improve oral hygiene behaviours in antenatal women with gingivitis which may have long term benefits postnatally and can improve the pregnancy outcomes. To the best of our knowledge, no study till date has been conducted assessing the effectiveness of Mobile Health in pregnant women diagnosed with gingivitis in improving their oral hygiene after nonsurgical periodontal therapy. So this Randomised controlled Clinical Trial aims to clinically evaluate the effectiveness of Mobile Health in antenatal women with gingivitis in improving efficacy of Plaque control after non surgical periodontal therapy.

Enrollment

76 estimated patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18 to 35 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Systemically Healthy pregnant women of age 18-35 years
  2. 8-24 weeks of Gestation
  3. Generalized gingivitis (BOP score >30%s, without attachment loss and radiographic bone loss, PPD≤3mm)
  4. Access to mobile phone
  5. At least 20 natural teeth present

Exclusion criteria

  1. Presence of systemic diseases that could influence the outcome of periodontal therapy (Diabetes mellitus, Hypertension)
  2. Smoking/alcohol consumption
  3. Patient currently on any antibiotic therapy
  4. Risk for Preterm Birth (Delivery < 37 weeks of gestation)
  5. History of periodontal treatment in the last 6 months
  6. Physically and mentally impaired patients

Trial design

Primary purpose

Supportive Care

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

76 participants in 2 patient groups

MOBILE HEALTH
Experimental group
Description:
Patients will be given Phase I Therapy including Supragingival and Subgingival scaling along with chairside oral hygiene instructions and a mobile phone message reminder will be sent atleast twice a week
Treatment:
Procedure: Phase I Therapy
Behavioral: Mobile health
CONVENTIONAL THERAPY
Active Comparator group
Description:
Patients will be given Phase I Therapy including Supragingival and Subgingival Scaling along with chairside oral hygiene instructions
Treatment:
Procedure: Phase I Therapy

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Shefali Sharma, MDS; Dr. Sanjay Tewari, MDS

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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