A 4-quadrant, single-blind study was designed to test the efficacy of
periodontal disease therapy by local
drug delivery. A delivery system made of extruded
ethylene vinyl acetate fibers loaded with 25% USP
tetracycline hydrochloride was placed and maintained in
periodontal pockets for 10 days. The clinical effects of this form of
therapy were compared with treatment by periodontal scaling. In addition, the effect of treatment by combined local delivery and scaling was investigated. Untreated quadrants were included as control. Placement of
tetracycline-loaded
ethylene vinyl acetate fibers into
periodontal pockets established a
drug concentration of approximately 0.06%. By covering the delivery system with a
periodontal dressing, this concentration level was maintained throughout the 10-day therapeutic period. The average
tetracycline dose used was 2.4 mg/tooth treated. Following fiber
therapy, treated sites improved clinically, as evidenced by a gain in periodontal attachment and a decrease in
periodontal pocket depth. The rate of new lesion formation at fiber-treated sites decreased from a pretreatment rate of 26.5% of sites/year to a posttreatment rate of 4.8% of sites/year. Periodontal scaling also produced clinical improvement, as indicated by significant attachment gain, pocket depth reduction and a decreased rate of new lesion formation. However, in no case were clinical results by scaling superior to results by local
drug delivery, and by several measures local
drug delivery was found to provide a better clinical response. Principal measures by which the clinical response using local
drug delivery exceeded that by scaling were in early (3-6 months) attachment gain and in the degree of reduction of new lesion formation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)