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Effect of topical application of doxycycline on pulp revascularization and periodontal healing in reimplanted monkey incisors

187

Citations

21

References

1990

Year

Abstract

Maxillary incisors in 47 monkeys, 54 in the experimental group (I) and 117 in the control group (II), were extracted and reimplanted, either immediately or after 30 or 60 min wet or dry storage. Incisors in the experimental group I were additionally kept 5 min in a suspension of 1 mg doxycycline in 20 ml physiologic saline, freshly prepared for each of the 15 animals before reimplantation. The observation time varied from 6 to 8 weeks. The teeth were removed in tissue blocks, histologically processed and evaluated for occurrence of complete pulp revascularization (CPR), presence of the micro-organisms in the pulpal lumen and ankylosis or inflammatory root resorption. Then the results were statistically evaluated, using log-linear analyses and chi-square tests (SAS, 1985) for the comparisons between group I and group II. These analyses revealed that topical application of doxycycline increased the frequency of complete pulp revascularization (P less than 0.002) and decreased the frequency of micro-organisms in the pulpal lumen (P less than 0.001). Furthermore, the frequencies of ankylosis (P less than 0.05) and inflammatory root resorption (P less than 0.001) were also decreased compared with the control group of teeth. It was concluded that the effect of topical treatment with doxycycline was most probably exerted on the micro-organisms that contaminated root surface during the extra-alveolar time; contamination of necrotic pulp tissue from the mechanical damage in the cervical part of the root surface was not affected.

References

YearCitations

1972

513

1981

491

1981

349

1986

277

1980

213

1981

202

1985

169

1985

138

1990

126

1982

120

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