125 research outputs found
Electromyographic and patient-reported outcomes of a computer-guided occlusal adjustment performed on patients suffering from chronic myofascial pain
Objectives: Muscular hyperactivity is a potential source of symptoms in patients with temporal-mandibular disorders. An adequate occlusal adjustment may relieve such symptoms. This study aims to measure the effect of shortening the protrusive disclusion time (DT) and balancing the center of occlusal forces (COF) on the EMG recordings and
assess the pain reported by chronic patients one month after the computer-guided occlusal adjustment.
Study Design: The sample studied comprised 34 patients suffering from chronic facial pain in which the EMG
activity of both masseters was recorded by electromyography. By selective grinding we alleviated all the occlusal
interferences during the mandibular protrusion from the habitual closure position in order to establish an immediate posterior disclusion and an equilibration of the COF.
Results: At follow-up 76.5% of the patients reported no facial pain. Moreover, the EMG activity and protrusive DT
were significantly reduced, and occlusal and muscular function were significantly more symmetric than at baseline.
Conclusions: According to this EMG study, this computer-guided occlusal adjustment is able to reduce the activity
of the masseters and the self-reported muscular pain of patients one-month after treatment
The occupational role of dental conditions among a consecutive sample of Spanish workers
Objectives: To assess the occupational impact of the mouth in terms of days of work loss in the last year and the perception of the working performance disturbance because of the oral conditions. Study design: A consecutive sample (n=269) of the Regional Government staff of the province of Granada (Spain) was recruited. Participants were asked about work loss related to health problems in the past 12 months, capturing the aetiological entities, the frequency of the work absent and the total days loss. Also subjects reported if they believed that mouth affects their occupational performance, and if they have perceived difficulties for carrying out work because of the mouth. Data on sociodemographic, behavioural and clinical factors were also gathered. Chi-squared test, Odds ratio (OR) and relative risk (RR) of perceived occupational role were used to quantify the effect of the modulating factors. Results: Almost 40% of individuals were absent from work during the last year spending on average 5.4 days for recovering. Colds and musculoskeletal pathology were the major causes of sick leave. Dental disease caused short work absences (4 days on average) only in 2.8% of participants. However most of workers (62.5%) considered mouth to influence their occupational performance, mainly because of the pain-related events (61.7%), but only 4.1% of workers reported difficulties in carrying out their work in the past 12 months. Females (RR=1.3), participants attending regular dental visits (RR=1.4) and denture wearers (RR=2.5) were shown to have significantly higher risk of perceiving an occupational role of the mouth. Those workers reporting that mouth influences their work have significantly poorer oral health than counterparts. Conclusions: Most workers considered that mouth influences their occupational performance but dental disease has demonstrated to be a minor occupational cause of sick leave in terms of prevalence and magnitude of work loss. © Medicina Oral S. L
Oral health-related quality of life of a consecutive sample of Spanish dental patients
Objectives: Assessment of the oral health-related quality of life and the modulating factors of patients deman-- ding dental treatment in the city of Salamanca, through the use of two validated instruments: the OIDP-sp (Oral Impacts on Daily Performance) and OHIP-14 (Oral Health Impact Profile). Study design: the study was conducted on a consecutive sample of 200 patients aged 18-65 years visiting an Integral Dental Centre in the city of Salamanca. Two validated instruments (OIDP-sp and OHIP-14) were used to measure the oral health-related quality of life. An analogue visual scale was used to register oral satisfaction. Data on sociodemographic background, behavioural and clinical factors were also gathered. ANOVA, T Student Test, and both Pearson and Spearman correlations coefficients were used for the statistical analysis. Results: according to the OIDP, 68.5% suffered from some kind of impact in their oral quality of life, while impact prevalence with the OHIP was 85%. Some other factors influencing the quality of life and degree of satisfaction were revealed. Conclusions: patients over 45 years, regardless of their gender, from high social class, living in rural areas and with poor hygiene, showed higher impact and lower satisfaction. The study also revealed some clinical conditions closely related to the level of satisfaction. © Medicina Oral S. L
Changes in crevicular cytokines after application of melatonin in patients with periodontal disease
A clinical trial was designed to evaluate the effects of topical application of melatonin on the crevicular fluid levels of interleukins and prostaglandins and to evaluate changes in clinical parameters. A consecutive sample of 90 patients were recruited from the Health Centre of Pinos Puente in Granada, Spain and divided into 3 groups: 30 patients with diabetes and periodontal disease, who were given melatonin; 30 patients with diabetes and periodontal disease, who were given a placebo, and 30 healthy individuals with no history of systemic disease or clinical signs of periodontal disease, who were also given a placebo. The 30 patients with diabetes and periodontitis were treated with topical application of melatonin (1% orabase cream formula) for 20 days by. The rest of the patients with diabetes and periodontitis and healthy subjects were treated with a placebo of orabase cream. We measured the gingival index by exploring the percentage of standing teeth bleeding on probing. The periodontogram was performed with a Florida Probe. In the diabetic patients who were given topical melatonin, there was a statistically significant decrease in the two clinical parameters. By contrast, in diabetic patients who were given the topical placebo, there was no statistically significant variation. In patients with diabetes and periodontal disease, treatment with topical melatonin was associated with a significant improvement in the gingival index and in pocket depth, and a statistically significant reduction in concentrations of interleukin-1?, interleukin-6 and prostaglandin E2 in gingival crevicular fluid
Effect of topical application of melatonin on serum levels of C-reactive protein (CRP), interleukin-6 (IL-6) and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α) in patients with type 1 or type 2 diabetes and periodontal disease
Background: The present clinical trial study was designed to assess the effect of topical application of melatonin on
serum levels of tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α), interleukin-6 (IL-6) and C-reactive protein (CRP) in patients
with diabetes and periodontal disease in comparison with healthy controls.
Material and Methods: Serum levels of TNF-α and IL-6 were measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay
and CRP by nephelometry by using the proper commercial kits in 30 patients with diabetes and periodontal disease, and also in a control group of 30 healthy subjects. Periodontograms were performed using the Florida Probe®.
Patients with diabetes were treated with a topical application of melatonin (1% orabase cream formula) once daily
for 20 days. Healthy subjects were treated with a placebo orabase cream.
Results: Patients with diabetes and periodontal disease had significantly higher mean levels of serum TNF-α, IL-6
and CRP than healthy subjects (
P
< 0.001). Following topical melatonin application, there was a statistically signi
-
ficant decrease in the gingival index and pocket depth (
P
< 0.001) as well as a significant decrease in IL-6 and CRP
serum levels (
P
< 0.001). Local melatonin application in patients with diabetes and periodontal disease resulted in
a significant decrease in CRP and IL-6 serum levels as well as an improvement in the gingival index and pocket
depth. Patients with periodontal disease had significantly higher serum CRP, IL-6 and TNF-α values by comparison
with healthy subjects.
Conclusions: We conclude that melatonin can modulate the inflammatory action of these molecules in periodontal
patient
Neuropathic pain associated with mucocele in the maxillary sinus
Mucocele in the paranasal sinuses consists of a clinically unpainful, pseudocystic lesion that may be confused with
cysts with mucosal accumulation due to an obstruction of a seromucinous gland or with other lesions displaying
expansive masses in the maxillary sinuses. Histologically, mucocele consists of an accumulation of seromucosal
secretion lined by epithelium. It is an infrequent pathology, whose treatment has evolved favourably to a considerable extent over the past decades. Here we report a case of mucocele located in a paranasal sinus associated with
a syndrome of odontalgic neuritic pain. After the collection of complementary radiological evidence, antrostomic
surgical treatment was implemented on the lateral-external wall of the maxillary sinus with a view to fully removing the cystic capsule, after which a histopathological study of the sample was performed. The lesion and the
neuropathic pain disappeared following removal of the cystic mass, and after 21 months of follow-up the patient
has remained free of relapse. Conclusions: lateral antrostomy for the removal of mucocele in the maxillary sinus
can alleviate the neuropathic pain possibly associated with the pathology
State anxiety and depression as factors modulating and influencing postoperative pain in dental implant surgery. A prospective clinical survey
Objetives: To determine whether preoperative state anxiety and depression modulate or influence objective and
subjective postoperative pain following dental implant insertion.
Study Design: Prospective, clinical study with 7-day follow-up of a sample of 105 subjects who preoperatively
completed the state anxiety questionnaire (STAI-E) and Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) and postoperatively, at
2 and 7 days, recorded objective pain with the Semmes-Weinstein mechanical esthesiometer (SW test) and subjective pain with the Visual Analog Scale (VAS).
Results: 85.6% and 81.5% of patients, respectively, recorded no signs of state anxiety or depression. The correlation between anxiety and depression for both maxillary bones was the lower (
P
=0.02). The correlation between
subjective and objective pain at 2 and 7 days, and the anatomic regions intervened, was statistically significant in
the mandible at day 7 (
P
<0.01), and highly significant (
P
<0.001) for the other variables. The correlation between
state anxiety and objective pain at day 7 was nearly statistically significant (
P
=0.07).
Conclusions: The correlation between state anxiety and depression, and objective and subjective pain at day 7 was
not statistically significant. A strong correlation was found between objective and subjective pain in the immediate
postoperative period
Validation of the oral health impact profile (OHIP-20sp) for Spanish edentulous patients
Objectives: The purposes of this study are to validate the indicator of Oral Health Impact Profile for edentulous patients (OHIP-20sp) in the Spanish population and to analyze the factorial construct of the prosthetic well-being. Study Design: A total of twenty-one (n=21) edentulous patients wearing mandibular implant-over dentures on Locator® (LO) and twenty (n=20) with complete dentures (CD) were retrospectively evaluated in this study. All participants were recruited consecutively and were treated in the previous academic year 2009-2010 by professors of the University of Salamanca. Reliability analyses and validity tests were performed in order to evaluate the psychometric properties of OHIP-20sp employing two different total score methods (additional and simple count). A retrospective evaluation of the impact of the prosthetic treatment was captured with an evaluative instrument derived from OHIP-20, and named POST-OHIP-13. Results: The reliability coefficient (Cronbach?s alpha = 0.91) has shown a high internal consistency. Item-total correlations coefficients ranged from 0.46 and 0.81. Five factors, named as disability, functional comfort, psychosocial impact, pain-discomfort and functional limitations were identified as principal components of the construct, explaining almost 85% of the variance. The 48% of the sample felt at least one impact in an occasional or more frequently manner (generally food packing). The global transition judgment of the prosthetic treatment using the POST-OHIP-13 was significantly higher in group LO than in the CD group. Conclusions: OHIP-20 seems to be a reliable and valid indicator to measure oral impact and satisfaction in the Spanish edentulous population. The underlying construct is comprised by 5 factors named as disability, functional comfort, psychosocial impact, pain-discomfort and functional limitations
Immune Priming Triggers Cell Wall Remodeling and Increased Resistance to Halo Blight Disease in Common Bean
[EN] The cell wall (CW) is a dynamic structure extensively remodeled during plant growth
and under stress conditions, however little is known about its roles during the immune system
priming, especially in crops. In order to shed light on such a process, we used the Phaseolus vulgaris-
Pseudomonas syringae (Pph) pathosystem and the immune priming capacity of 2,6-dichloroisonicotinic
acid (INA). In the first instance we confirmed that INA-pretreated plants were more resistant to
Pph, which was in line with the enhanced production of H2O2 of the primed plants after elicitation
with the peptide flg22. Thereafter, CWs from plants subjected to the different treatments (non- or
Pph-inoculated on non- or INA-pretreated plants) were isolated to study their composition and
properties. As a result, the Pph inoculation modified the bean CW to some extent, mostly the pectic
component, but the CW was as vulnerable to enzymatic hydrolysis as in the case of non-inoculated
plants. By contrast, the INA priming triggered a pronounced CW remodeling, both on the cellulosic
and non-cellulosic polysaccharides, and CW proteins, which resulted in a CW that was more resistant
to enzymatic hydrolysis. In conclusion, the increased bean resistance against Pph produced by INA
priming can be explained, at least partially, by a drastic CW remodeling.SIThis research was funded by the Spanish Ministry of Economy, Industry and Competitiveness, grant number RTC-2016-5816-2
Use of Technology to Engage Students in the English Learning Process at 9th Grade in the Public School Che Guevara during the first Semester 2020, Villa el Carmen
The use of computer, projector, tablets and applications engage students in English learning process. These technological resources help students in language development skills. The study also tried to find out the effect of ITC classrooms on student`s motivation and how technology is used by the teacher during ICT classrooms. The research methodology consisted on: a teacher´s interview, students´ survey questionnaire, and a classroom observation. With respect to the analysis, the research method applied was qualitative. The results showed that technology is a tool that motivates students to learn English and also helps them develop language competence. The study also demonstrated that the use of technology is effective in regards to students´ learning because learners can practice different abilities even out of the classroom. To conclude, the use of technology is important in English class’s development because it helps to promote English learning and language competence abilities to motivate studen
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