METHOD

Hirudotherapy in treatment of chronic generalised periodontitis

About authors

1 Pirogov Russian National Research Medical University, Moscow, Russia

2 Evdokimov Moscow State University of Medicine and Dentistry, Moscow, Russia

3 Peoples’ Friendship University of Russia, Moscow, Russia

Correspondence should be addressed: Aitan I. Abdullaeva
Ostrovityanova 1, Moscow, 117997; ur.tsil@aknatia

About paper

Author contribution: Sashkina TI, Abdullaeva AI — research planning, data processing, manuscript editing; Zaychenko OV and Pustovaya EP — data processing, statistical data processing, manuscript editing; Sokolova SI, Saldusova IV — data processing, manuscript editing; Faskhutdinov DK, Runova GS — data collection, manuscript drafting.

Received: 2019-06-25 Accepted: 2019-07-25 Published online: 2019-08-18
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According to the WHO, over 90% of the world's population suffer from chronic inflammatory periodontal diseases that run for a long period of time and resist treatment, leading to tooth loss, development of chronic diseases of the gastrointestinal tract, cardiovascular and other systems, which negatively affect health and quality of life of such people [1, 2]. Therefore, periodontitis is more than a medical problem, it is also a social one since it affects the lives of people. Successful periodontitis therapies are standing problem for dental professionals. There are various approaches to the treatment of periodontitis. Surgical, physiotherapeutic and alternative treatment methods, like naturopathy, often complete the courses of mandatory antimicrobial therapy and professional oral hygiene procedures. According to the published literature, hirudotherapy is one of the methods applied to counter various inflammatory diseases. Leech saliva is a bacteriostatic agent, which means it reduces the bacterial load on periodontal tissues and normalizes hemostasis [3]. This fact encouraged us to study hirudotherapy as a treatment modality that can be a part of the conservative CGP therapy [4,5].

The goal of this research effort was to learn the efficacy of hirudotherapy in the complex conservative treatment of CGP patients.

PATIENTS AND METHODS

The study involved 50 patients, 21 male and 29 female, aged 32 to 52 years, suffering from light, moderately severe and severe CGP. Inclusion criteria: signed informed consent; the presence of CGP absence of concomitant somatic pathology at the age of 32 to 52 years; taken training in wound care; preliminary therapy in accordance with the standard approved by the Ministry of Health of the Russian Federation; Exclusion criteria: the presence of concomitant somatic pathology; age younger than 32 and older than 52 years; non-compliance with the medical requirements and non-compliance with oral hygiene; lack of prior therapy in accordance with the standard approved by the Minister of Health of the Russian Federation. They were divided into two groups so as to have the clinical and functional characteristics. 25 patients formed the treatment group: 9 (36%) had light CGP, 9 (36%) other — moderately severe CGP and in 7 (28%) patients the disease developed into the severe stage. The distribution of CGP stages in the control stages was the same (fig. 1). No participant had a somatic pathology aggravating the disease in question. We used the objective indices to assess the efficacy of treatment: PMA and the Green-Vermillion index, which allow monitoring the degree of inflammation.

For the treatment group patients, a week's course included the standard antimicrobial, anti-inflammatory therapy, professional oral hygiene procedures, which were followed by hirudotherapy, i. e. attaching leeches to the inflamed periodontal tissues (fig. 2). We used the standard size (0.6–1 g) medicinal leeches. The course, which ran for a month, consisted of 6–8 procedures conducted twice a week. The leeches were attached 2 hours after eating; the patients were warned that their oral cavities should be free from specific odors, such as those of onion, garlic, mouth rinse, coffee, cardamom. Also, the patients were forbidden to smoke and to use perfumes 5–6 hours before their visits to the dentist.
The patients in the control group received standard treatment. Instead of hirudotherapy, they were observed with the aim to control how they follow the prescribed personal oral hygiene routines.
We applied the Student's test in statistical processing of the obtained results; the confidence level was set at 95% (p < 0.05). STATISTICA 10 software (Round Rock; USA) was used to perform the processing.

RESULTS

Having analyzed the data collected, we learned that medicinal leeches augmented the effect of standard therapy in the treatment group, and the indices describing state of periodontal tissue showed a continuing downward trend. After treatment, the PMA index was at the lowest point in light CGP cases: from 21.89 ± 2.03 to 14.89 ± 2.14 (p < 0.05). In patients with moderately severe CGP the PMA decrease was less obvious: from 33.74 ± 3.57 to 25.74 ± 3.21. In the cases where the disease has progressed to severe stage, PMA went down slightly, but the decrease could not be called significant: from 67.85 ± 1.28 to 64.24 ± 1.26 (p ≥ 0.05) (fig. 3). Compared to the treatment group, the results registered in the control group were less pronounced. The PMA index decreased from 24.91 ± 2.73 to 19.91 ± 2.08 (p < 0.05) in light CGP cases, which is significant but not as great as what was seen in the treatment group. In patients with moderately severe CGP the index changed from 33.61 ± 3.14 to 28.36 ± 3.44, and in severe CGP cases — from 67.15 ± 1.28 to 66.85 ± 1.18 (fig. 4), both the former and the latter change being non-significant (p ≥ 0.05). Comparing the data collected in both groups, we discovered that the protocol applied in the treatment group delivered a stronger clinical effect in light and moderately severe CGP cases (fig. 5).

DISCUSSION

To a certain extent, the findings of our study are consistent with those of a paper published in 2014 that described introduction of hirudotherapy and Lipin (liposomal drug) to the periodontitis treatment protocol. The authors of that paper wrote about the suggested complex approach being more effective than the standard one, but did not measure the contribution of each component to the final result of the treatment [6]. We showed that medicinal leeches, applied separately, help arrest inflammation in CGP patients, reduce edema, arterial hyperemia and gum bleeding. Application of medicinal leeches made the effect from standard treatment more pronounced and lasting (compared to the control group), which increased duration of the remission. The dynamics of change of the indices monitored was positive; the change to the better was registered after 2–4 hirudotherapy procedures. The effect was stronger in light and moderately severe CGP cases.

CONCLUSIONS

The study demonstrated a positive effect hirudotherapy offers as part of the CGP treatment protocol. This treatment tactic significantly increases the efficacy of standard therapeutic measures and significantly reduces the inflammatory potential of periodontal tissues: pain, itching, bleeding gums. Given the growing antibiotic resistance and high sensitivity of population to antibacterial drugs in particular, hirudotherapy may be the method of choice, and sometimes one of the few treatment modalities applicable to certain groups of population.

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