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📖 Core Concepts Periodontium – the supporting tissues of a tooth: gingiva, alveolar bone, cementum, periodontal ligament (PDL). Gingivitis – inflammation of the gums without irreversible loss of attachment; fully reversible with plaque control. Periodontitis – chronic inflammatory disease causing loss of attachment and alveolar bone; irreversible. Dental Biofilm – organized microbial community attached to tooth surfaces; protected by an extracellular polysaccharide matrix. Staging & Grading (2018) – Stage I‑IV = severity/complexity; Grade A‑C = rate of progression (slow‑moderate‑rapid). Clinical Pocket Depth – measured from gingival margin to base of sulcus; healthy = 1–3 mm, no bleeding on probing (BOP). --- 📌 Must Remember Normal sulcus depth: 0.5–3 mm; deeper = periodontal pocket. Key risk factors: smoking, uncontrolled diabetes, poor oral hygiene, genetics, stress, hormonal changes (pregnancy). Primary treatment: non‑surgical debridement (scaling & root planing) = gold standard. Staging cues: Stage I: ≤2 mm attachment loss, ≤15 mm probing depth. Stage II: 3–4 mm attachment loss, ≤15 mm probing depth. Stage III: ≥5 mm attachment loss, ≤30 mm probing depth, possible tooth loss. Stage IV: ≥5 mm attachment loss, >30 mm probing depth, dentition loss risk. Grading cues: Grade A: ≤0.25 mm CAL loss/yr, ≤2 mm bone loss/yr. Grade B: 0.25–2 mm CAL loss/yr, 2–3 mm bone loss/yr. Grade C: >2 mm CAL loss/yr, >3 mm bone loss/yr. Maintenance interval: ≥ every 3 months after active therapy. --- 🔄 Key Processes Biofilm Formation Pellicle formation (saliva & GCF proteins). Reversible bacterial adhesion (1–2 h). Irreversible adhesion via adhesins. Co‑adhesion of early colonisers → later colonisers. Maturation to multispecies climax community. Detachment for colonisation of new sites. Host Response Cascade Plaque → bacterial products damage epithelium → cytokine release → neutrophil recruitment → if overload → neutrophil degranulation → tissue‑destructive enzymes → chronic inflammation → macrophage/lymphocyte activation → collagen breakdown & bone resorption. Periodontal Assessment Workflow History → clinical indices (PSR/CPITN) → full charting (PD, CAL, recession, BOP, furcation, mobility) → radiographs → staging & grading → treatment plan. --- 🔍 Key Comparisons Gingivitis vs. Periodontitis Gingivitis: inflammation only, no CAL loss, pocket ≤3 mm, fully reversible. Periodontitis: attachment loss, bone loss, pocket >3 mm, irreversible. Hand vs. Ultrasonic Debridement Hand: tactile feedback, good for fine scaling, operator‑dependent fatigue. Ultrasonic: faster, better for heavy calculus, may cause heat → requires cooling. Phase I vs. Phase II Therapy Phase I: scaling & root planing, oral‑hygiene instruction, antimicrobial adjuncts. Phase II: surgical access (flap, grafts, GTR) for persistent deep pockets or defects. --- ⚠️ Common Misunderstandings “All gum bleeding = periodontitis.” Bleeding can occur in healthy gingiva; look at pocket depth and BOP together. “Scaling removes all bacteria.” Scaling removes biofilm and calculus but cannot eradicate bacteria embedded deep in the matrix; maintenance is essential. “If a patient quits smoking, disease stops instantly.” Smoking cessation improves healing but prior damage remains; ongoing monitoring required. --- 🧠 Mental Models / Intuition “The “Traffic Light” Model: Green (≤3 mm, no BOP) = healthy. Yellow (4–5 mm, occasional BOP) = gingivitis → needs improved hygiene. Red (≥6 mm, consistent BOP) = periodontitis → requires Phase I + possible Phase II. “Host‑Bacterial Balance Scale”: When bacterial load > neutrophil capacity → shift to disease; think of a tipping scale. --- 🚩 Exceptions & Edge Cases Drug‑induced gingival enlargement – can mimic plaque‑induced gingivitis but requires medication review. Necrotizing periodontal diseases – rapid tissue necrosis, pain, fetor; occur in immunocompromised or severely stressed patients. Systemic disease‑related periodontitis – classification based on underlying condition (e.g., diabetes‑associated). --- 📍 When to Use Which Pocket depth ≤5 mm & no furcation: start with Phase I non‑surgical therapy. Pocket >5 mm, persistent BOP after Phase I, or furcation involvement: consider Phase II surgical approach. Patient with limited manual dexterity: recommend powered toothbrush + interdental brushes; adjunctive chlorhexidine mouthwash. Pregnant patient with gingival inflammation: prioritize meticulous plaque control; defer elective surgery until postpartum. --- 👀 Patterns to Recognize “Localized vs. Generalized” pattern: Localized – ≥30% of sites involved in ≤2 quadrants → often molar‑incisor pattern. Generalized – ≥30% of sites across all quadrants. Radiographic bone loss pattern: vertical (angular) defects suggest need for regenerative surgery; horizontal loss often managed non‑surgically. Consistent BOP with shallow pockets → early gingivitis; deep pockets with BOP → active periodontitis. --- 🗂️ Exam Traps Distractor: “All periodontal disease is caused by poor oral hygiene.” – Wrong; systemic factors (smoking, diabetes, genetics) are also major contributors. Trap: “A pocket depth of 4 mm always indicates periodontitis.” – Misleading; depth must be paired with BOP and CAL loss. Near‑miss: “Scaling alone eliminates all pathogens.” – Incorrect; residual pathogens can persist, emphasizing need for maintenance. Choice confusion: “Stage III is defined by pocket depth >5 mm only.” – Incomplete; also requires ≥5 mm CAL loss and potential tooth loss risk. ---
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