2006
DOI: 10.1902/jop.2006.050302
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Surgical Versus Non‐Surgical Periodontal Treatment: Psychosocial Factors and Treatment Outcomes

Abstract: Psychosocial factors (i.e., anxiety, depression, stress, and well-being) can affect the patients' quality of life on the day of periodontal treatment and the pain experience and medications used after surgical and non-surgical periodontal therapy (4-week period). Patient-provider communication should address the role of these factors in the treatment process.

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Cited by 29 publications
(24 citation statements)
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“…Therefore, it seems important to develop continuing education programs and educational materials about these matters that can be accessed easily by busy providers. Kloostra et al 39 investigated the relationships among anxiety, stress, and depression and pain perceptions; the use of pain medication; and wound healing following periodontal surgery. Of the three psychosocial factors, depression had the most significant impact on pain perceptions, the use of pain medication, and wound healing.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Therefore, it seems important to develop continuing education programs and educational materials about these matters that can be accessed easily by busy providers. Kloostra et al 39 investigated the relationships among anxiety, stress, and depression and pain perceptions; the use of pain medication; and wound healing following periodontal surgery. Of the three psychosocial factors, depression had the most significant impact on pain perceptions, the use of pain medication, and wound healing.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These are the result of inflammatory processes induced by the surgical wound healing such as induction of cyclooxygenase‐2 pathway, upregulation of interleukin‐1 beta (IL‐1β), release of prostanoids, lipoxins, ω3‐ eicosapentaenoic acid‐derived resolvins of the E‐series, docosahexaenoic acid‐derived resolvins of the D series, protectins, maresins, and increased neuronal excitability in the spinal cord . The known factors associated with postoperative discomfort, swelling, or bleeding, based on previous evidence, include, but are not limited to, the duration of intervention, surgical extension, postoperative smoking, surgeon expertise, nature of surgical intervention, the use of periodontal wound dressing, patient sex, presurgical stress, and various other psychosocial factors . Furthermore, antibiotic use has been experimentally associated with accelerated healing, reduced patient discomfort, and less incidence of postoperative infection .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…, Kloostra et al. ). Individuals under high work load, those with poor marital status (Marcenes & Sheiham ), occupational dissatisfaction (Linden et al.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%