Nd:YAG Laser Use and Peri-Implantitis

Dentistry Today

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With an increase in the number of implants being placed, clinicians are seeing more in­stances of failure due to peri-implantitis. This inflammatory process revolves around Gram-negative bacteria, such as Porphyromonas gingivalis, as well as the interaction be­tween the bacterial en­do­tox­in, lipopolysaccharide (LPS), and the implant surface. LPS adheres tenaciously to the im­plant surface and acts as a chronic inflammatory stimulus. Bacterial death releases ad­­ditional LPS, which increases the inflammatory reaction around the implant. The best treatment protocols should address both bacterial elimination and LPS removal. The Nd:YAG laser has been shown to be both safe and effective at high frequency and low energy at ablating bacteria. The original article authored by Gianelli, et al ap­peared in the June 2009 Journal of Perio­don­tol­ogy and in­vesti­gated laser irradiation with an Nd:YAG laser to determine if it could lessen the LPS-me­­diated in­flammatory re­sponse. Mu­rine macro­phages and hu­man um­bilical vein en­dothe­lial cells were placed on various combinations of culture me­dia, titanium disks, and titanium discs coated with P ging­ivalis. Con­trols were tested for nitric oxide (NO) formation and other various criteria as indicat­ors of in­flammatory re­sponse and en­dothelial cell adherence. Some of the disks were pretreated with exposure to 1,064 nm Nd:YAG irradiation at 20 mJ and 70 Hz. The study found that the criteria used to measure macro­phage activation such as NO production were significantly re­duced in the disks treated with laser ir­radiation versus those that were not. The au­thors conclude that Nd:YAG laser irradiation is effective both as a bacterial decontamination proc­ess and in inhibiting LPS-me­diated inflammation without having a deleterious effect on the titanium im­­plant surface.


(Source: What’s New II?, Oak­stone Publishing, July 2009.)