This study evaluated the effect of dosage on severity of cyclosporin-A (CSA) induced gingival overgrowth. Eighty (80) male Sprague-Dawley rats were randomly distributed into 4 groups. Rats in each group daily received CSA in mineral oil by gastric feeding at dosages of 0 (control), 3, 10, and 30 mg/kg, respectively, for 6 weeks. Stone models of the mandibular incisal region were obtained biweekly and were used for analysis of the gingival dimensions. Animals were sacrificed at the end of week 6 and tissue sections were processed for histopathologic evaluations. Animals were sacrificed at the end of week 6 and tissue sections were processed for histopathologic evaluation Gingival overgrowth including bucco-lingual and mesio-distal width and vertical height were significantly increased with increasing CSA dosage. Furthermore, the gingival dimensions displayed a positive linear relation to dosage and treatment duration. The histopathologic evaluation revealed a granulomatous tissue wedging the tooth-gingival interface in the 3 mg/kg group. This tissue had reached exuberant size in the 10 and 30 mg/kg groups. In summary, the analysis of gingival dimensions the histopathologic evaluation shows a dose-dependent effect on the severity of CSA-induced gingival overgrowth.
Gingival dimensions and histopathologic alterations in periodontium were examined in rats continuously exposed to cyclosporin-A (CSA). 60 male Sprague-Dawley rats were divided into 2 groups. Rats in the test group daily received CSA in mineral oil by gastric feeding at a dosage of 30 mg/kg body weight for 6 weeks. Rats in the control group received mineral oil only. 10 rats from each group were sacrificed at 2-week intervals. Gingival dimensions were assessed from stone models obtained from the maxillary and mandibular incisal regions. Horizontal, sagittal and frontal tissue sections were obtained from these regions as well. Gingival dimensions in the mandibular and maxillary incisal regions were significantly increased in rats exposed to CSA. Light-microscopic observations revealed a granulation tissue formation at tooth-gingiva interface and an irregular bony surface on dental alveoli in experimental animals. Because both soft and hard tissue of periodontium in experimental rats being significantly effected by CSA compared to control animals, we hypothesized that the periodontium is a target tissue for CSA.
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