Perio Ch.12
informed consent
-Dental hygienist provides complete and comprehensive information about the recommended plan for periodontal instrumentation -Patient needs to make a well-informed decision about accepting or rejecting proposed treatment -Also includes possible risks or unanticipated outcomes of treatment as well
caution!
-Do not assume that all probes have the same pattern of millimeter markings. -A millimeter ruler can be used to determine the marking pattern of a particular probe.
functions of probes
-Findings from an examination with a periodontal probe are used to determine the health of the periodontal tissues. -Probes are used like miniature rulers for making intraoral measurements
healthy sulcus
-Junctional epithelium is the tissue that forms base of the sulcus -Sulcus defined as the distance from the gingival margin to the coronal-most part of the junctional epithelium
other uses of probes
-Measure sulcus and pocket depths -Measure clinical attachment levels -Determine the width of the attached gingiva -Assess for the presence of bleeding -Measure the size of oral lesions -Measure longitudinal response of periodontium to treatment
attached gingiva
-Part of the gingiva that is tightly connected to the cementum on the root and to the connective tissue cover of the alveolar bone
interdental gingiva
-Portion of the gingiva that fills the area between two adjacent teeth apical to the contact area
Probe in a Healthy Sulcus
-Probe inserted into a healthy gingival sulcus *In health, the probing depth should be from 1 mm to 3 mm in depth*.
depth measurement
-Record six areas or zones per tooth. -Record one reading per zone (the deepest). -Round up measurements to nearest full millimeters.
parallelism
-The probe working-end is positioned as parallel as possible to the root surface. -The probe must be parallel in the mesiodistal dimension and the faciolingual dimension.
gingival sulcus
-The v-shaped space between the free gingiva and the tooth surface -A periodontal probe is inserted into this space to assess its health
millimeter markings
-The working-end of a probe is marked in millimeter increments. -There are many different patterns of millimeter markings. -Color-coded probes are marked in bands.
interproximal readings
-Walk the probe between the teeth until it touches the contact area -Slant the probe slightly so that the tip reaches under the contact area. -In this position, gently press downward to touch the soft tissue base
Design of Probe working-end
-Working-end is blunt and rod shaped -Cross section may be circular or rectangular -Calibrated with millimeter markings
Florida Probe
-computer-assisted probe with digital readouts and computer data storage
Calibrated periodontal probe
-marked in millimeter increments -evaluates health of periodontal tissue
Documenting Consent
-written consent: plan signed by patient & hygienist in patient chart -verbal or implied consent not as legally sound as written consent
probe tip
1-2 mm of the side of the probe
stroke pressure
A pressure exerted with the probe tip against the soft tissue base of the sulcus or pocket should be between 10 and 20 g.
Probe in Periodontal Pocket
A probing depth deeper than 3 mm indicates a periodontal pocket.
Markings at Certain Intervals
Marks are found at 1, 2, 3, 5, 7, 8, 9, and 10 mm.
measurements recorded
Measurements are recorded for six specific sites or zones on each tooth. *the deepest reading is recorded*
Informed refusal
Occurs when the patient refuses treatment after he/she has been fully educated regarding the consequences of not receiving the treatment.
mandible gets in the way
Reposition the instrument handle to the side of the patient's face to reach the distal surfaces of the maxillary molars.
probing depth
The distance in millimeters from the gingival margin to the base of the sulcus or periodontal pocket as measured with a probe
correct adaptation of probe tip
The probe tip is kept in contact with the tooth surface throughout the walking stroke
incorrect adaptation of probe tip
The probe tip should NOT be held away from the tooth.
color coded probe
This example is marked at 3, 6, 9, and 12 mm
Walk the Entire Circumference
Walking strokes with the probe should cover the entire circumference of the sulcus or pocket base.
periodontal pocket
a gingival sulcus that has been deepened by disease; depth is greater than 3 mm
probe walking stroke
a series of bobbing strokes that are made within the sulcus or pocket while keeping the probe tip against the tooth surface -junctional epithelium not always a uniform depth *do not remove probe with each stroke*
gingival pocket
is deepening of gingival sulcus caused by detachment of coronal portion of junctional epithelium and swelling of tissue
UNC 15 probe
millimeter markings at 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, and 15 mm.
Free gingiva
the unattached portion of the gingiva that surrounds the tooth in the region of the CEJ