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Anatomy of the periodontium in
children
Gingiva
Marginal gingiva
 For children,marginal gingival tissue around the primary
dentition are more highly vascular
 contain fewer connective tissue than tissues around the
permanent teeth.
Attached gingiva
 The width of attached gingival is less variable in the primary
dentition,
 there is less mucogingival problem in the primary dentition
Junctional epithelium
 There continue to be an apical shift when the teeth are fully
erupted.
 the gingival margins are frequently at different levels on adjacent
teeth that are at different stages of eruption.
 Sometimes it gives an erroneous appearance that gingival recession
has occurred around those teeth that have been in the mouth
longest.
 Stability is achieved at 12 years for 1 2 3 5 6, 16 years for the other
teeth.
 Periodontal ligament
 Periodontal ligament space is wider in children
 It is less fibrous and more vascular
 Cementum
 Thinner
 Alveolar bone
 Thinner cortical plates
 Larger marrow spaces
 Greater vascularity
 Fewer trabeculae
Gingival conditions
 Acute gingivitis
 Chronic gingivitis
 Gingival overgrowth
 Factitious gingivitis
 Mucogingival problems
Primary herpetic gingivostomatitis
Definition:
An acute infectious disease of the gingiva caused by the herpesvirus
Pathogeny:
 Herpes simplex viruses Herpes simplex viruses (HSVs)
 Two types exist: type 1 (HSV-1) and type 2 (HSV-2). Both are closely related but
differ in epidemiology
 Type-1 Gingivostomatitis
 Type-2 Genitalia
Transmission:
 HSV-1 is transmitted chiefly by contact with infected saliva
 Infected saliva from an adult or another child is the mode of infection.
 HSV-2 is transmitted sexually or from a mother's genital tract infection to her
newborn.
Prevalence:
 HSV infection appears to have increased worldwide in
the last 2 decades, making it a major public health
concern.
 Many primary infections are asymptomatic, Herpes
simplex infections are asymptomatic in as many as
80% of patients,
 Symptomatic infections may be characterized by
significant morbidity and recurrence.
Moreover, infections can cause life-threatening
complications, particularly in immunocompromised
hosts.
Clinical features:
Age:
 6 months to 3 years
Incubation period
 1 week
Prodrome:
 Febrile illness
 Headache, malaise, oral pain
 Cervical lymphadenopathy
Symptom
 Gingivitis:
 Gingivitis is the most striking feature,
 with markedly swollen, erythematous, friable gums
 Vesicular lesions:
 Vesicular lesions develop on oral mucosa ,lip and tongue
 can occur anywhere in the oral cavity,
 on the perioral skin,
 on the pharynx
 Diagnosis: According to Clinical features,History and age
Prognosis
 Oral lesions heal without scarring
Course:
 Acute disease lasts 5-7 days, and the symptoms
subside in 2 weeks.
 Viral shedding from the saliva may continue for 3
weeks or more.
 Adults also may develop acute gingivostomatitis,
 but it is less severe and is associated more often with a
posterior pharyngitis.
 Treatment:
 The availability of effective chemotherapy underscores that
the prompt recognition of the infection
 early initiation of therapy are of utmost importance in the
management of the disease.
 The goals of treatment are to make the patient comfortable
and to prevent secondary infections or worsening systemic
illness. It includes:
Pharmacotherapy
 Antiviral treatment
.
 Symptomatic treatment
 Antiviral treatment :
 Overall, medical treatment of HSV revolves around specific
antiviral treatment.
 Patients should be advised about the potential for
autoinoculation if they touch the herpetic lesion and then
touch a mucous membrane or an eye.
 Controlling autoinoculation can be a challenge if the patient
is a young child.
Symptomatic treatment
In situations in which constitutional effects such as fever
occur, symptomatic treatment can be used.
 Analgesics, such as acetaminophen, may make the patient
more comfortable.
 Aspirin should be avoided in pediatric patients because of the
possibility of Reye syndrome.
 Topical anesthetics and coating agents may make the patient
more comfortable and may aid in the consumption of food;
however, they do not speed healing.
 Appropriate wound care is needed, and treatment for
secondary bacterial skin infections may be required
Supporting treatment :
 Soft diet
 Be kept well hydrated:
 The patient should maintain fluid intake and a balanced diet
with the use of liquid food replacement if necessary
 Bed rest
 Warnings to parent:
 No school, day care etc.
 Children are highly contagious
 Sterilize eating and drinking utensils
 Disease is self-limiting; 10-14 days in duration
Acute necrotizing ulcerative
gingivitis(ANUG)
Aetiology:
 Broad anaerobic infection
 Causative organism: Fusiform bacteria , Spirochaete
 Other Gram-negative anaerobic organism
 Clinical features:
 Necrosis and ulceration
 Interdental papillae marginal gingival
 Covered by yellowish-grey pseudomembranous slough,
 Acute stage enters a chronic phase after 5-7days.
 Recurrence of the acute condition is inevitable
Pre-existing gingivitis
Distinctive halitosis
Treatment
 Intense oral hygiene
 Oxidant: hydrogen peroxide
 Mechanical debridement
 Metronidazole
Chronic gingivitis
 Chronic gingivitis is a common condition.Untreated, gingivitis may
progress to gum disease or periodontal disease.
 Gingivitis is painless in the early stages, but may lead to bleeding gums
and other oral problems.
 Bleeding gums are only one sign of gingivitis.
 Gums become red and swollen,
 teeth may become loose or may eventually fall out.
Prevalence:
increases steadily between the ages of 5 and 9 years, peaks at 11 years and
decrease slightly with age to 15 years.
Etiology:
Closely associated with the amount of plaque, debris and calculus
present.
 Eruptive gingivitis
 Filth gingivtis
 Crowding gingivtis
 Puberty gingivitis
 Catarrh gingivitis
scurvy
People at risk of scurvy include:
 People with chronic malnutrition or those that eat less
than 2 servings of fruits/vegetables per day
 Alcoholics
 Elderly
 Men who live alone (bachelor or widower scurvy)
 Children
 People on peculiar diets or food fads
 People with other medical conditions that may prevent the
intake and/or absorption of vitamin C
 Dialysis patients
 Malabsorption disorders
 Severe dyspepsia. [2]+[1]
Signs & symptoms
 Symptoms of scurvy generally develop after at least 3
months of severe or total vitamin C deficiency, they
includes:
 Weakness & fatigue
 Bruising easily & bleeding from weakening blood
vessel, connective tissue & bones due to collagen loss.
 Hair, teeth loss & gingivitis .
 Infants may be irritable, have pain when they
move, and lose their appetite. Infants do not gain
weight as they normally do.
 In infants and children, bone growth is impaired, and
bleeding and anemia may occur.
Oral manifestations
• gums may swell and become red, soft and
spongy. Any slight friction may cause the
gums to bleed.
• Often this results in poor oral hygiene
and dental diseases
• The gum findings are most
• striking in the interdental and marginal
gingiva, which
• become red, smooth, swollen, and shiny.
• Later thegums appear
purplish, sometimes even black and
• necrotic5,
Papillon Lefevre Syndrome
 -Papillon-Lefevre Syndrome
 (Palmoplantar Keratoderma with
Periodontosis)
 -Inherited as an autosomal recessive trait
 -Mutation of the gene that produces the
enzyme Cathespin C.
 -Greater frequency in consanguineous
offspring
Clinical features
 -Children are born looking completely normal. They may have redness on
palms of hands and soles of feet.
 -Teeth erupt in normal sequence, position, and time.
 -At age 1, when primary teeth starting to erupt, the gum tissue is severely
inflamed and generalized aggressive periodontitis accompany the teeth.
 -By age 4, the child has lost all of there primary dentition.
 -Gingival tissue in mouth goes back to healthy & normal.
 -Eruption of the permanent dentition begins at normal age and in normal
sequence
 -Patient will loose their permanent teeth and be completely edentulous by age 14-
17
Clinical Features
Papillon-Lefevre Syndrome
Radiographic Features
teeth seem to be “floating on air”
-severe bone loss
Eruptive gingivitis
Cause:
 Trauma of gingiva
 Debris and food residue
Clinical feature:
Site:
Primary teeth and the 1st permanent molar
Treatment:
 Oral hygiene
Filth gingivtis
 Clinical feature:
 Age: 3Y~5Y
 Site:Buccal, Papi
 Symptom:redness, bleeding
 Treatment:
 1)Local cleaning, antiinflection
 2)Oral hygiene
Puberty gingivitis
 Cause:
 Increase of sex hormones in circulating levels
*sex hormones :
Oestrogen
 Increases the cellularity of tissues and provides suitable growth
condition for species associated with established gingivitis
Progesterone
Increases the permeability of the gingival vasculature
Clinical features:
 Good oral hygiene,
 gum tends to bleed and hyperplasia
 Bad oral hygiene
Catarrh gingivitis
 Cause
 The infection of hemolytic streptococcus
 Clinical features:
Oral lesion
 soft and hematose gum,
 no vesicles or ulcers
Systemic reaction:
 fever,
 headache,
 myalgia,
 arthralgia
 Treatment:
 Local: Rinse
Crowding gingivitis
 Symptom:
 Redness and thickness
 Treatment:
 Oral hygiene
 Orthodontic treatment
Factitious gingivitis
Minor form
 Etiology: Rubbing or picking the gingiva using the fingernail, or from abrasive
foods
 Management: correct the habit and remove the source of irritation
Major form
 The injuries are more severe and widespread ,
 can involve the deeper periodontal tissues.
 Other areas of the mouth such as the lips and tongue may be involved.
 Extraoral injuries may be found on the scalp, limbs or face.
 Management
 A Dressing and protection of oral wounds
 B No lying with dentists
 C Psychological or psychiatric consultation
Riga–Fede disease
 Riga–Fede disease is an oral condition
found, ararely, in newborns
 that manifests as an ulceration on the ventral surface
of the tongue or on the inner surface of the lower lip.
 It is caused bytrauma to the soft tissue from
erupted baby teeth.[1]
 It can be described as a sublingual traumatic
ulceration.
 Although it begins as an ulceration, it may progress to
a large fibrous mass with repeated trauma
Drug-induced gingival overgrowth
 The clinical changes of drug-induced overgrowth are very similar irrespective of
the drug involved.
 The first signs of changes are seen after 3-4months of drug administration.
 Progress: The interdental papilla become nodular before enlarging more
diffusely to encroach upon the labial tissue
 Site:The anterior part is most severely and frequently involved
Sypmtom:
 with a good standard of oral hygiene,
 overgrowth gingiva is pink,firm and stippled,
 When there is a pre-exiting gingivitis the enlarged tissues compromise an
already poor standard of plaque control.the gingiva then exhibit the classical
signs of gingivitis
Management
 A strict programme of oral hygiene instruction, scaling and
polishing must be implemented.
 Severe cases of gingival overgrowth inevitably need to be
surgically excised and then recontoured to procedure an
architecture that allows adequate access for cleaning
 A follow-up programe is essential to ensure a high standard
of plaque control and to detect any recurrence of the
overgrowth.
 To modify or change the anticonvulsant therapy if
phenytion-induced overgrowth is refractory
 Indefinite oral care if there is no alternative.
Periodontal complications of
orthodontic treatment
 Gingivitis
 Gingival overgrowth
 Attachment and bone loss
 Gingival recession
 Trauma
Early-onset aggressive periodontal
disease
Generalized form
 Gingiva:
 fiery red,swollen,and haemorrhagic
 Tissue:
 hyperplastic with granular or nodularproliferation
 Gross deposits of plaque
 Progress: extremely rapidly, primary teeth loss:3-4 years
 Bone loss: may be restricted to one arch
 Localized form
 A Progresses more slowly
 B Bone loss affects only incisor-molar teeth
 C Plaque levels are low
 Treatment
 A Intense oral hygiene at frequent intervals
 B Antibiotic
 C Extraction of the teeth
CONCLUSION
 Oral hygiene is general index of health…
visit your dentist regularly…
 prevention is better than cure 
THANK YOU
Submitted by
Aghil Madathil
CRRI
JKKNDC

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Periodontal diseases in children

  • 1.
  • 2.
  • 3. Anatomy of the periodontium in children Gingiva Marginal gingiva  For children,marginal gingival tissue around the primary dentition are more highly vascular  contain fewer connective tissue than tissues around the permanent teeth.
  • 4. Attached gingiva  The width of attached gingival is less variable in the primary dentition,  there is less mucogingival problem in the primary dentition Junctional epithelium  There continue to be an apical shift when the teeth are fully erupted.  the gingival margins are frequently at different levels on adjacent teeth that are at different stages of eruption.  Sometimes it gives an erroneous appearance that gingival recession has occurred around those teeth that have been in the mouth longest.  Stability is achieved at 12 years for 1 2 3 5 6, 16 years for the other teeth.
  • 5.  Periodontal ligament  Periodontal ligament space is wider in children  It is less fibrous and more vascular  Cementum  Thinner  Alveolar bone  Thinner cortical plates  Larger marrow spaces  Greater vascularity  Fewer trabeculae
  • 6. Gingival conditions  Acute gingivitis  Chronic gingivitis  Gingival overgrowth  Factitious gingivitis  Mucogingival problems
  • 7. Primary herpetic gingivostomatitis Definition: An acute infectious disease of the gingiva caused by the herpesvirus Pathogeny:  Herpes simplex viruses Herpes simplex viruses (HSVs)  Two types exist: type 1 (HSV-1) and type 2 (HSV-2). Both are closely related but differ in epidemiology  Type-1 Gingivostomatitis  Type-2 Genitalia Transmission:  HSV-1 is transmitted chiefly by contact with infected saliva  Infected saliva from an adult or another child is the mode of infection.  HSV-2 is transmitted sexually or from a mother's genital tract infection to her newborn.
  • 8. Prevalence:  HSV infection appears to have increased worldwide in the last 2 decades, making it a major public health concern.  Many primary infections are asymptomatic, Herpes simplex infections are asymptomatic in as many as 80% of patients,  Symptomatic infections may be characterized by significant morbidity and recurrence. Moreover, infections can cause life-threatening complications, particularly in immunocompromised hosts.
  • 9. Clinical features: Age:  6 months to 3 years Incubation period  1 week Prodrome:  Febrile illness  Headache, malaise, oral pain  Cervical lymphadenopathy
  • 10. Symptom  Gingivitis:  Gingivitis is the most striking feature,  with markedly swollen, erythematous, friable gums  Vesicular lesions:  Vesicular lesions develop on oral mucosa ,lip and tongue  can occur anywhere in the oral cavity,  on the perioral skin,  on the pharynx  Diagnosis: According to Clinical features,History and age
  • 11. Prognosis  Oral lesions heal without scarring Course:  Acute disease lasts 5-7 days, and the symptoms subside in 2 weeks.  Viral shedding from the saliva may continue for 3 weeks or more.  Adults also may develop acute gingivostomatitis,  but it is less severe and is associated more often with a posterior pharyngitis.
  • 12.  Treatment:  The availability of effective chemotherapy underscores that the prompt recognition of the infection  early initiation of therapy are of utmost importance in the management of the disease.  The goals of treatment are to make the patient comfortable and to prevent secondary infections or worsening systemic illness. It includes:
  • 14.  Antiviral treatment :  Overall, medical treatment of HSV revolves around specific antiviral treatment.  Patients should be advised about the potential for autoinoculation if they touch the herpetic lesion and then touch a mucous membrane or an eye.  Controlling autoinoculation can be a challenge if the patient is a young child.
  • 15. Symptomatic treatment In situations in which constitutional effects such as fever occur, symptomatic treatment can be used.  Analgesics, such as acetaminophen, may make the patient more comfortable.  Aspirin should be avoided in pediatric patients because of the possibility of Reye syndrome.  Topical anesthetics and coating agents may make the patient more comfortable and may aid in the consumption of food; however, they do not speed healing.  Appropriate wound care is needed, and treatment for secondary bacterial skin infections may be required
  • 16. Supporting treatment :  Soft diet  Be kept well hydrated:  The patient should maintain fluid intake and a balanced diet with the use of liquid food replacement if necessary  Bed rest
  • 17.  Warnings to parent:  No school, day care etc.  Children are highly contagious  Sterilize eating and drinking utensils  Disease is self-limiting; 10-14 days in duration
  • 18. Acute necrotizing ulcerative gingivitis(ANUG) Aetiology:  Broad anaerobic infection  Causative organism: Fusiform bacteria , Spirochaete  Other Gram-negative anaerobic organism  Clinical features:  Necrosis and ulceration  Interdental papillae marginal gingival  Covered by yellowish-grey pseudomembranous slough,  Acute stage enters a chronic phase after 5-7days.  Recurrence of the acute condition is inevitable Pre-existing gingivitis Distinctive halitosis
  • 19. Treatment  Intense oral hygiene  Oxidant: hydrogen peroxide  Mechanical debridement  Metronidazole
  • 20. Chronic gingivitis  Chronic gingivitis is a common condition.Untreated, gingivitis may progress to gum disease or periodontal disease.  Gingivitis is painless in the early stages, but may lead to bleeding gums and other oral problems.  Bleeding gums are only one sign of gingivitis.  Gums become red and swollen,  teeth may become loose or may eventually fall out.
  • 21. Prevalence: increases steadily between the ages of 5 and 9 years, peaks at 11 years and decrease slightly with age to 15 years. Etiology: Closely associated with the amount of plaque, debris and calculus present.  Eruptive gingivitis  Filth gingivtis  Crowding gingivtis  Puberty gingivitis  Catarrh gingivitis
  • 22. scurvy People at risk of scurvy include:  People with chronic malnutrition or those that eat less than 2 servings of fruits/vegetables per day  Alcoholics  Elderly  Men who live alone (bachelor or widower scurvy)  Children  People on peculiar diets or food fads  People with other medical conditions that may prevent the intake and/or absorption of vitamin C  Dialysis patients  Malabsorption disorders  Severe dyspepsia. [2]+[1]
  • 23. Signs & symptoms  Symptoms of scurvy generally develop after at least 3 months of severe or total vitamin C deficiency, they includes:  Weakness & fatigue  Bruising easily & bleeding from weakening blood vessel, connective tissue & bones due to collagen loss.  Hair, teeth loss & gingivitis .  Infants may be irritable, have pain when they move, and lose their appetite. Infants do not gain weight as they normally do.  In infants and children, bone growth is impaired, and bleeding and anemia may occur.
  • 24. Oral manifestations • gums may swell and become red, soft and spongy. Any slight friction may cause the gums to bleed. • Often this results in poor oral hygiene and dental diseases • The gum findings are most • striking in the interdental and marginal gingiva, which • become red, smooth, swollen, and shiny. • Later thegums appear purplish, sometimes even black and • necrotic5,
  • 25. Papillon Lefevre Syndrome  -Papillon-Lefevre Syndrome  (Palmoplantar Keratoderma with Periodontosis)  -Inherited as an autosomal recessive trait  -Mutation of the gene that produces the enzyme Cathespin C.  -Greater frequency in consanguineous offspring
  • 26. Clinical features  -Children are born looking completely normal. They may have redness on palms of hands and soles of feet.  -Teeth erupt in normal sequence, position, and time.  -At age 1, when primary teeth starting to erupt, the gum tissue is severely inflamed and generalized aggressive periodontitis accompany the teeth.  -By age 4, the child has lost all of there primary dentition.  -Gingival tissue in mouth goes back to healthy & normal.  -Eruption of the permanent dentition begins at normal age and in normal sequence  -Patient will loose their permanent teeth and be completely edentulous by age 14- 17
  • 29. Radiographic Features teeth seem to be “floating on air” -severe bone loss
  • 30. Eruptive gingivitis Cause:  Trauma of gingiva  Debris and food residue Clinical feature: Site: Primary teeth and the 1st permanent molar Treatment:  Oral hygiene
  • 31. Filth gingivtis  Clinical feature:  Age: 3Y~5Y  Site:Buccal, Papi  Symptom:redness, bleeding  Treatment:  1)Local cleaning, antiinflection  2)Oral hygiene
  • 32. Puberty gingivitis  Cause:  Increase of sex hormones in circulating levels *sex hormones : Oestrogen  Increases the cellularity of tissues and provides suitable growth condition for species associated with established gingivitis Progesterone Increases the permeability of the gingival vasculature Clinical features:  Good oral hygiene,  gum tends to bleed and hyperplasia  Bad oral hygiene
  • 33. Catarrh gingivitis  Cause  The infection of hemolytic streptococcus  Clinical features: Oral lesion  soft and hematose gum,  no vesicles or ulcers Systemic reaction:  fever,  headache,  myalgia,  arthralgia  Treatment:  Local: Rinse
  • 34. Crowding gingivitis  Symptom:  Redness and thickness  Treatment:  Oral hygiene  Orthodontic treatment
  • 35. Factitious gingivitis Minor form  Etiology: Rubbing or picking the gingiva using the fingernail, or from abrasive foods  Management: correct the habit and remove the source of irritation Major form  The injuries are more severe and widespread ,  can involve the deeper periodontal tissues.  Other areas of the mouth such as the lips and tongue may be involved.  Extraoral injuries may be found on the scalp, limbs or face.  Management  A Dressing and protection of oral wounds  B No lying with dentists  C Psychological or psychiatric consultation
  • 36. Riga–Fede disease  Riga–Fede disease is an oral condition found, ararely, in newborns  that manifests as an ulceration on the ventral surface of the tongue or on the inner surface of the lower lip.  It is caused bytrauma to the soft tissue from erupted baby teeth.[1]  It can be described as a sublingual traumatic ulceration.  Although it begins as an ulceration, it may progress to a large fibrous mass with repeated trauma
  • 37.
  • 38. Drug-induced gingival overgrowth  The clinical changes of drug-induced overgrowth are very similar irrespective of the drug involved.  The first signs of changes are seen after 3-4months of drug administration.  Progress: The interdental papilla become nodular before enlarging more diffusely to encroach upon the labial tissue  Site:The anterior part is most severely and frequently involved Sypmtom:  with a good standard of oral hygiene,  overgrowth gingiva is pink,firm and stippled,  When there is a pre-exiting gingivitis the enlarged tissues compromise an already poor standard of plaque control.the gingiva then exhibit the classical signs of gingivitis
  • 39. Management  A strict programme of oral hygiene instruction, scaling and polishing must be implemented.  Severe cases of gingival overgrowth inevitably need to be surgically excised and then recontoured to procedure an architecture that allows adequate access for cleaning  A follow-up programe is essential to ensure a high standard of plaque control and to detect any recurrence of the overgrowth.  To modify or change the anticonvulsant therapy if phenytion-induced overgrowth is refractory  Indefinite oral care if there is no alternative.
  • 40. Periodontal complications of orthodontic treatment  Gingivitis  Gingival overgrowth  Attachment and bone loss  Gingival recession  Trauma
  • 41. Early-onset aggressive periodontal disease Generalized form  Gingiva:  fiery red,swollen,and haemorrhagic  Tissue:  hyperplastic with granular or nodularproliferation  Gross deposits of plaque  Progress: extremely rapidly, primary teeth loss:3-4 years  Bone loss: may be restricted to one arch
  • 42.  Localized form  A Progresses more slowly  B Bone loss affects only incisor-molar teeth  C Plaque levels are low  Treatment  A Intense oral hygiene at frequent intervals  B Antibiotic  C Extraction of the teeth
  • 43. CONCLUSION  Oral hygiene is general index of health… visit your dentist regularly…  prevention is better than cure 
  • 44. THANK YOU Submitted by Aghil Madathil CRRI JKKNDC