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Gum disease and type 2 diabetes are common chronic diseases that affect each other. Diabetes is increasing, especially in Pakistan. People with diabetes have a greater risk for gum disease. Also, it is thought that that gum disease, a chronic infection, can be a source of systemic inflammation and may contribute to poorer diabetes control.
The aims of this project are to study:
Part I (up to 12 months after implant placement):
The study will recruit 30 patients with type 2 diabetes and severe gum disease from Dr. Amin Rahman's private practices in Pakistan. Their long-term sugar (HbA1c) must be 7.5% or more and the inflammatory marker, C-reactive protein (hsCRP) 1mg/dL or more. Consenting participants will first have an oral examination. Eligible patients will have impressions of the jaws and the color of their teeth and gums recorded. At the next visit, all teeth will be extracted and dentures provided. One week later, there will be a check-up visit. Three months after the teeth were removed, Straumann dental implants will be placed in the jaws. After one week, the patient will be checked again. After three months, the dentures will be adjusted to fit the implants. Follow-up visits will occur every three months until one year after the implants were placed to check the health of the patients as well as their implants, the gums around them, and the dentures. Blood samples will be taken at each follow-up visit.
Part II (from 12 months to 11 years after implant placement):
Follow-up visits will occur every six months for the next ten years, to check the health of the patients as well as their implants, the gums around them, and the dentures. The follow-up visit will be identical to those done in Part I, including blood samples.
Full description
Part I:
Our hypotheses are that levels of HbA1c and hsCRP will:
Part II:
Our hypothesis is that:
a) the implants will be retained over the long term
Only one arm was included due to ethical reasons: Once potential participants would be diagnosed with terminal periodontal (gum) disease, they would need full-mouth extraction and prosthetic rehabilitation. It would be unethical to withhold or delay treatment that is known to work, especially because such severe gum infection can have very serious consequences. Therefore, no control group was included in study.
Few studies have determined what happens to sugar control and inflammatory markers in people with diabetes if teeth with severe gum disease are removed and replaced with implants and dentures. Neither has any study followed for a total of 11 years after implant placement such subjects that initially had uncontrolled type 2 diabetes as well as recent severe periodontal infection, and several of whom smoke cigarettes.
Therefore, the results of this study could add new understanding about diabetes and dental health. The results of this study could influence dental care guidelines for treating people with uncontrolled or poorly type 2 diabetes and severe gum disease. The option of implant supported dentures could potentially be added to the treatment choices for such patients.
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30 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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