Delirium in a non-selected population aged 65+ years is uncommon. However, prevalence rises very quickly in selected older groups. Primary care doctors should be aware of a relatively high risk of delirium among the elderly in long-term care, those older than 85 years and those with dementia.
In aggressive periodontitis, comprehensive mechanical/surgical and antimicrobial therapy is an appropriate treatment regimen for long-term stabilization of periodontal health. In this study, periodontal disease progression was successfully arrested in 95% of the initially compromised lesions, while 2% to 5% experienced discrete or recurrent episodes of loss of periodontal support.
The purpose of the present study was to investigate whether functionally different macrophages are present in clinically healthy gingiva and during human experimental gingivitis. Eight male probands were introduced to an oral hygiene program until all reached mean Plaque and Gingival Index scores approaching zero. During the following 19 days all oral hygiene was abandoned. At d -14, 0, 2, 4, 7, 11 and 19 clinical indices and gingival biopsies were taken. Cryostat sections were incubated with monoclonal antibodies against mature macrophages (25F9), inflammatory macrophages (27E10) and anti-inflammatory macrophages (RM 3/1). Positive cells were counted in the inflammatory infiltrate (IF) and the connective tissue (CT). At d -14 elevated numbers of 27E10-positive cells were observed which decreased significantly at d 0 (p less than 0.018) and increased again at d 19 (p less than 0.026). Significant differences in the number of RM 3/1-positive cells were found between d 0 and d -14, 2, 4 and 7 (p less than 0.05) while no differences in the number of 25F9-positive cells were observed throughout this study. It was concluded that experimental gingival inflammation is characterized by the appearance and disappearance of functionally different macrophage subpopulations.
Exaggerated neutrophil responses are a critical component in the pathogenesis of periodontal disease. We investigated whether leukocyte activity in aggressive periodontitis (AP) is increased compared with that in chronic periodontitis (CP) by gingival crevicular fluid (GCF) analysis of myeloperoxidase (MPO), beta-N-acetyl-hexosaminidase (beta-NAH), cathepsin D (CD), and elastase-alpha-1-proteinase inhibitor complex (alpha-1-EPI) before and 6 months after therapy. Initial AP neutrophil responses were significantly amplified compared with those in CP (MPO, 3.2-fold; beta-NAH, 37.5-fold; CD, 2.2-fold; alpha-1-EPI, 1.4-fold; p < 0.05). Surgical therapy resulted in a significant reduction of GCF markers compared with non-surgical treatment. However, the changes in clinical parameters were not different between AP and CP (P > 0.05). Analysis of the results suggests that the local inflammatory response in AP is characterized by increased release of inflammatory mediators of neutrophil origin into the GCF. Analysis of the data further suggests that surgical therapy is a more predictable method for removal of the pro-inflammatory etiology.
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