4.5 Review

The role of cigarette smoking in periodontal disease and treatment outcomes of dental implant therapy

Journal

PERIODONTOLOGY 2000
Volume 90, Issue 1, Pages 45-61

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/prd.12449

Keywords

dental implants; host response; microbiota; oral hygiene; periodontal disease; periodontal pocket; periodontal therapy; smoking

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Tobacco smoking is related to periodontal disease through various mechanisms, including inflammation, changes in microbial communities, and compromised tissue healing. Studies have shown that smoking affects clinical indices, microbial flora, and inflammatory and immune responses, as well as treatment outcomes for periodontal disease and implant therapy. Passive smoking also has potential harmful effects, highlighting the importance of smoking cessation.
Tobacco smoking has been implicated in periodontal pathology through various mechanisms, including perturbations of the inflammatory and host responses to putative periodontal pathogens, alterations in the subgingival microbial communities, and a compromised healing potential of the tissues leading to imbalance of tissue homeostasis. This review provides the evidence for the relationship between cigarette smoking and periodontal disease in an attempt to explain possible mechanisms of how tobacco smoking may exert its negative effects on the periodontal tissues via systemic and localized pathways. Early and more recent studies explore cigarette smoking-induced changes in periodontal clinical indices; in subgingival microbial flora by employing traditional detection methods for selected microorganisms, in addition to modern techniques such as deep sequencing and bioinformatics analyses that are able to fully characterize the microbial communities; and in inflammatory and immune responses critically appraising study limitations and differences in study protocol designs. Periodontal treatment outcomes and implant therapy outcomes are reviewed in an attempt to shed light on possible mechanisms for the inferior treatment outcome noted in smokers. The potential harmful effects of passive smoking are also reviewed, providing evidence for the advantages of smoking cessation. Quitting cigarette smoking should be recommended by the dentist, and effort should be made to inform smokers about the negative effects of smoking on the periodontal status and implant therapy outcomes.

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