Cigarette Smoking and the Periodontal Patient

2004 
Evidence from cross-sectional and case-control studies in various populations demonstrates that adult smokers are approximately three times as likely as non-smokers to have periodontitis. The association between smoking and attachment loss is even stronger when the definition of periodontitis is restricted to the most severely affected subjects. Smokers have a diminished response to periodontal therapy and show approximately half as much improvement in probing depths and clinical attachment levels following non-surgical and various surgical modalities of therapy. Implant failures in smokers are twice those of nonsmokers, with a higher failure rate in the maxillary arch accounting for the majority of the difference. Tobacco-induced alterations in microbial and host factors contribute to these deleterious effects of smoking on the periodontium. In longitudinal studies, the rate of periodontal disease progression is increased in smokers, but decreases to that of a nonsmoker following tobacco cessation. Likew...
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    167
    References
    293
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []