Periodontally  compromised teeth adjacent to a lost tooth may help estimate whether  the loss could be related to periodontal disease when the actual  extraction reasons are unknown, suggests a recent study published in  the Journal of Dentistry.
    An Li and colleagues from the  Center for Dentistry and Oral Hygiene, University Medical Center  Groningen, University of Groningen, Groningen, the Netherlands aimed  to assess the inter-tooth relationships based on the periodontal  characteristics of existing teeth.
    A cross-sectional dataset of  8,978 participants with complete periodontal examination (including  probing pocket depth [PPD] and clinical attachment loss [CAL]) was  used in this study. Spearman rank correlation was applied to assess  the inter-tooth correlations of probing pocket depth/ clinical  attachment loss among 28 teeth after adjustment for relevant  confounders.   
    The authors further verified the  findings in the Java Project on Periodontal Disease with tooth loss  is related to periodontal disease information available (the number  of tooth loss is related to periodontal disease = 12).
    The results showed that strong  probing pocket depth/ clinical attachment loss correlations were  observed in adjacent teeth rather than those on non-adjacent teeth.
    The correlations increased among  severe periodontitis cases. In line with this, they further observed  that the teeth adjacent to the tooth loss is related to periodontal  disease tooth had the most alveolar bone loss in the Java dataset.
    Therefore, it was concluded that  the periodontitis parameters (PPD/CAL) of adjacent teeth could be a  potential indicator to estimate tooth loss is related to periodontal  disease when actual reasons for tooth extraction are unknown.
    Periodontally compromised teeth  adjacent to a lost tooth may help estimate whether the loss could be  related to periodontal disease when the actual extraction reasons are  unknown, they further inferred.
    https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jdent.2021.103755
 
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