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Dive into the research topics where Aneesha Acharya is active.

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Featured researches published by Aneesha Acharya.


Metabolic Syndrome and Related Disorders | 2010

Cardioprotective Effect of Periodontal Therapy in Metabolic Syndrome: A Pilot Study in Indian Subjects

Aneesha Acharya; Neeta Vijay Bhavsar; Bhavesh Jadav; Hiral Parikh

BACKGROUND Obesity, metabolic syndrome, and atherosclerosis are linked with an increased acute-phase response. Severe periodontal disease is associated with cardiovascular disease as sequelae of a systemic inflammatory response. OBJECTIVE The aim of this study was to assess changes in measures of systemic inflammation induced by periodontal therapy in periodontally diseased individuals with metabolic syndrome, compared to those induced in a systemically healthy group. METHODS A total of 31 subjects with chronic generalized periodontitis, including 16 subjects with metabolic syndrome (group A) and 15 systemically healthy subjects (group B), underwent nonsurgical periodontal therapy. Serum high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (hsCRP), total leukocyte count, and measures of lipid metabolism were measured at baseline and at 2 months after periodontal therapy. Baseline data for comparison was also obtained from 15 systemically and periodontally healthy individuals (group C). RESULTS Baseline periodontal parameters and serum CRP were significantly higher in group A than in group B. In group A, following periodontal therapy, a significant decrease was noted in mean serum CRP (3.28 +/- 1.4 mg/L to 2.6 +/- 1.5 mg/L), total leukocyte counts (8,322 +/- 1,888 cells/mm(3) to 6,361 +/- 1,426 cells/mm(3)), serum triglycerides (153.3 +/- 38 mg/dL to 121.0 +/- 28.57 mg/dL), along with a significant rise in serum high-density lipoprotein (HDL) (41.1 +/- 5.2 mg/dL to 44.37 +/- 6.7 mg/dL). In group B, changes in these parameters were not statistically significant. Mean serum low-density lipoprotein (LDL) and mean cholesterol levels did not change significantly in either group. CONCLUSIONS Periodontal therapy produced significant modulation of serum hsCRP, total leukocytes, serum triglycerides, and HDL, and thus may benefit individuals affected with both metabolic syndrome and advanced periodontal disease.


Clinical Oral Implants Research | 2015

Novel bioresorbable strontium hydroxyapatite membrane for guided bone regeneration

Jia Hao; Aneesha Acharya; K. Chen; Joshua Chou; Shohei Kasugai; Niklaus P. Lang

OBJECTIVES Membrane materials have been widely used for guided bone regeneration (GBR). However, due to bio-functional limitation of the current membranes, the ideal resorbable membrane that can stimulate bone regeneration has yet to be developed. This study seeks to investigate the effects of a strontium hydroxyapatite (SrHA)-containing membrane for GBR. MATERIAL AND METHODS Strontium hydroxyapatite powder was synthesized and mixed with gelatin solution to the final concentration of 10 mg/ml (Sr10) and 20 mg/ml (Sr20). Approximately 100-μm-thick membranes were fabricated, and the mechanical properties and strontium ion release pattern were analyzed. Rat bone marrow stromal cell (BMSC) responses were investigated in vitro. Bilaterial rat calvarial defects were used in vivo to compare the SrHA membranes against commercially available collagen membranes and evaluated radiologically and histologically. RESULTS Strontium hydroxyapatite membranes exhibited higher elasticity and strength than the collagen membrane, and slow strontium ion release was also confirmed. No BMSC cytotoxicity was found on the SrHA membranes, and the alkaline phosphatase positively stained area was significantly greater than the collagen membrane at earlier time point. At 4 weeks, both micro-CT and histological analyses revealed that the Sr20 group yielded significantly greater bone formation. CONCLUSIONS The SrHA-containing membrane developed in this study was found to be a biocompatible material that can stimulate BMSC differentiation as well as bone regeneration and maturation in rat calvarial defects at early time point compared with collagen membrane. The best result was observed in Sr20 group, which can be potentially effective for GBR.


Medicina Oral Patologia Oral Y Cirugia Bucal | 2012

A double blind controlled trial comparing three treatment modalities for dentin hypersensitivity.

Nilam Brahmbhatt; Neeta Vijay Bhavsar; Vishal Sahayata; Aneesha Acharya; Payal Kshatriya

Aim: This randomized, double blind, split mouth study was aimed to compare three dentin desensitizing treatment modalities. Methods: Two hundred sixty teeth of 25 patients; each having at least 2 hypersensitive teeth in each quadrant, were included. Teeth were randomized to 4 groups: Group A treated with 2% NaF solution, Group B received GLUMA®; an aqueous solution of Hydroxy-Ethyl-Methacrylate and Glutarldehyde, (HEMA-G), Group C received iontophoresis with distilled water (placebo) and Group D was treated with NaF-iontophoresis. Pain response was evaluated on a visual analogue scale (VAS), by using tactile, air blast and cold-water stimuli at 0-day, 15-day, 1-month and 3-months interval. Results: All treatments were effective in reducing dentinal hypersensitivity significantly, Group D and Group B were more effective than Group A and Group C at all time intervals. Group D and Group B were equally effective in reducing dentinal hypersensitivity at 15-day and 1-month interval but Group D was more effective at 3-months. Conclusion: All treatment modalities were more effective in reducing hypersensitivity than placebo. 2% NaF-iontophoresis and HEMA-G were more effective than 2% NaF local application at all time intervals. But at 3-months, 2% NaF-iontophoresis was more effective than HEMA-G, while placebo produced no significant effect in reduction of hypersensitivity. Key words:Hypersensitivity, desensitisation, iontophoresis, dentin adhesive, sodium fluoride.


Clinical Oral Implants Research | 2014

Residual ridge dimensions at edentulous maxillary first molar sites and periodontal bone loss among two ethnic cohorts seeking tooth replacement

Aneesha Acharya; Jia Hao; Nikos Mattheos; Anson C.M. Chau; Prashant Shirke; Niklaus P. Lang

OBJECTIVES To study residual ridge dimensions at edentulous first molar sites in relation to periodontal bone loss among cohorts of partially edentulous Asian Indian and Hong Kong Chinese subjects seeking tooth replacement. MATERIALS AND METHODS A total of 628 edentulous maxillary first molar sites were analyzed on Cone Beam Computed Tomography scans of 225 Asian Indian (I) and 232 Hong Kong Chinese (C) partially edentulous adults seeking tooth replacement. Age, ethnicity, gender, total tooth loss, the presence or absence of adjacent teeth, categories of periodontal status defined according to radiographic alveolar bone loss (P0: periodontal health, P1: incipient to moderate disease, P2: severe periodontal disease) and sinus membrane abnormalities were noted. Alveolar ridge height (RH), widths at 1 and 3 mm from crest (RW1; RW3), and relative position of the bone crest (RR) were measured. RESULTS Prevalence of P2 status was most frequent in both cohorts(C: 50.4% I: 49.2%). P2 had lowest ridge heights; 13.1% C P2 and 14%I P2 had RH < 2 mm. Sites with both RH <8 mm and RW1 < 6 mm occurred at 59%C P2 and 68%I P2. Sinus membrane abnormalities were most frequent in P2. Periodontal status and sinus membrane abnormality increased the odds of RH <5 mm and RH <8 mm more than 2-fold; additionally, gender and ethnicity significantly impacted RH <8 mm. Gender and adjacent tooth status significantly affected RW1. CONCLUSION Incident advanced periodontal disease was common among Asian Indian and Hong Kong Chinese subjects seeking tooth replacement and associated with lower available bone heights. Ethnicity, gender, sinus membrane thickening affected available bone height in the subsinus region, while the presence of adjacent teeth- and age-affected residual ridge width.


Journal of Investigative and Clinical Dentistry | 2010

Generalized, severe, chronic periodontitis is associated with anemia of chronic disease: a pilot study in urban, Indian males

Vidya Naik; Aneesha Acharya; Vijay Deshmukh; Sharath Shetty; Ravi Shirhatti

AIM Anemia of chronic disease, a cytokine-mediated anemia, is a frequent complication of many chronic inflammatory conditions. The present case-control study was aimed to evaluate levels of systemic hematological markers indicative of anemia in patients with generalized, severe, chronic periodontitis. METHODS A convenience quota sample of 30 systemically-healthy, urban, male patients comprised two groups, based on full mouth periodontal examination: group A patients (n=15) were diagnosed with generalized, severe, chronic periodontitis, and group B patients comprised the control group (n=15), which included patients with a clinically-healthy periodontium. Laboratory blood investigations included hemoglobin (g%), total number of erythrocytes (red blood cells), hematocrit/packed cell volume, erythrocyte sedimentation rate, mean corpuscular volume of erythrocytes, and mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration. An analysis of covariance using age as a covariate was done to compare the mean values of hematological parameters within groups. RESULTS The mean values of hemoglobin, red blood cells, packed cell volume, and mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration were significantly lower, while the mean corpuscular volume of erythrocytes and erythrocyte sedimentation rate were significantly higher in group A patients compared to those in group B, indicating mild anemia. CONCLUSIONS Severe periodontal disease can be linked with anemic status.


Implant Dentistry | 2015

Three-Dimensional Evaluation of Alveolar Bone and Soft Tissue Dimensions of Maxillary Central Incisors for Immediate Implant Placement: A Cone-Beam Computed Tomography Assisted Analysis.

Mohit Kheur; Nidhi Kantharia; Supriya Kheur; Aneesha Acharya; Bach T. Le; Tania Sethi

Introduction:This study explored the relationship between the thickness of bone and soft tissue along the labial and palatal aspect of maxillary central incisors. The influence of overall socket width, labiopalatal positioning of the incisor on the bone, and soft tissue thickness were also investigated. Materials and Methods:This study used cone-beam computed tomography of 150 patients to determine labial, palatal soft and hard tissue thickness, labiopalatal (B-P) socket width and corelated the same to the labiopalatal positioning of maxillary central incisors. Results:Mean (SD) thicknesses of the labial soft tissue at cervical (C), midroot (M), and apical (A) locations and the corresponding bone thicknesses were 1.07 (0.28), 0.987 (0.27), 1.240 (0.41), and 0.928 (0.39), 0.894 (0.52), 1.57 (0.88), respectively. Similarly, palatal soft tissue and bone thicknesses at locations C, M, A were 1.807 (0.66), 1.557 (0.62), 1.639 (0.66), and 1.679 (0.62), 3.439 (1.28), 6.038 (1.63), respectively. Mean (SD) thicknesses of the B-P socket width at location C was 8.047 (0.963). Conclusions:There is a positive correlation between the labial and palatal bone and corresponding soft tissue thickness, between thickness of the labial bone and the labiopalatal thickness of the alveolar socket. No correlation was observed between the thickness of the labial cortical bone and the labiopalatal positioning of the tooth.


Journal of Oral Biosciences | 2010

Periodontal Ligament Stem Cells: An Overview

Aneesha Acharya; Sharath Shetty; Vijay Deshmukh

Adult postnatal stem cells are multipotent and can be experimentally induced to differentiate into various specialized cell lineages. This has generated considerable interest in the arena of stem cell-based therapeutics. The identification of stem cells within the periodontal ligament represents a significant development in this regard. Achieving predictable periodontal regeneration has long been a challenge, and it is known that cells involved in the mechanisms of periodontal wound healing are of mesenchymal stem cell (MSC) type. Thus, periodontal ligament stem cell (PDLSC)-based therapeutics may be a step towards predictable periodontal regeneration. Additionally, PDLSC may have alternative potential applications in hard tissue and tooth engineering. PDLSC may be isolated, grown under tissue culture conditions, expanded, optionally genetically modified and then collected and transplanted. This paper aims to overview the current knowledge, recent developments and methodology regarding PDLSC-based applications.


Oral Oncology | 2018

Shared genetic and epigenetic mechanisms between chronic periodontitis and oral squamous cell carcinoma

Simin Li; Xiangqiong Liu; Yu Zhou; Aneesha Acharya; Vuk Savkovic; Congling Xu; Ning Wu; Yupei Deng; Xianda Hu; Hanluo Li; Rainer Haak; Jana Schmidt; Wei Shang; Hongying Pan; Ren Shang; Yang Yu; Dirk Ziebolz; Gerhard Schmalz

OBJECTIVES To analyze bioinformatic datasets for detecting genetic and epigenetic mechanisms shared by chronic periodontitis (CP) and oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC). MATERIALS AND METHODS Datasets from GEO and TCGA databases reporting mRNAs, miRNAs or methylation expression in human CP and OSCC tissues were analyzed. Differential expression, functional enrichment and protein-protein interaction (PPI) network analyses were performed. Differentially expressed miRNAs (DEmiRNAs) and genes (DEG) in CP and OSCC were determined. DEmiRNA-target and DEmiRNA-DEG networks were constructed. Directly and indirectly interacting cross-talk genes were screened, and their prediction accuracy and association with OSCC prognosis was determined. RESULTS 3 DE-miRNAs (miR-375, miR-3609 and miR-3652) expressed in both CP and OSCC critically regulated most DEGs. Among 12 directly interacting cross-talk genes, NCAPH was significantly related with the prognosis of OSCC. NR2F2 had highest differential expression in CP and OSCC. Among 4 cross-talk genes (FN1, MPPED1, NDEL1, and NR2F2) differentially expressed in CP, 3 (FN1, MPPED1, NDEL1) were also expressed in OSCC. Among 12 indirectly interacting cross-talk genes differentially expressed in OSCC, 3 genes (CDCA8, HIST1H3J, and RAD51) were significantly related to its prognosis. Significant pathways involved in CP and OSCC included: chemokine receptors, class I PI3K signaling events, epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition and signaling events by VEGFR1 and VEGFR2, EGF receptor (ErbB1). CONCLUSION Bioinformatic analysis of available datasets implicated 1 directly interacting cross-talk gene (NCAPH), 4 indirectly interacting cross-talk genes (NCAPH, NR2F2, FN1, and MPPED1) and 3 DE-miRNAs (hsa-miR-375, miR-3609 and miR-3652) as shared genetic and epigenetic expression patterns between CP and OSCC.


Journal of Periodontal Research | 2018

Integrated analysis of long noncoding RNA-associated competing endogenous RNA network in periodontitis

Simin Li; Xiangqiong Liu; Hanluo Li; Hongying Pan; Aneesha Acharya; Y. Deng; Yang Yu; Rainer Haak; Jana Schmidt; Gerhard Schmalz; Dirk Ziebolz

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES Long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) play critical and complex roles in regulating various biological processes of periodontitis. This bioinformatic study aims to construct a putative competing endogenous RNA (ceRNA) network by integrating lncRNA, miRNA and mRNA expression, based on high-throughput RNA sequencing and microarray data about periodontitis. MATERIAL AND METHODS Data from 1 miRNA and 3 mRNA expression profiles were obtained to construct the lncRNA-associated ceRNA network. Gene Ontology enrichment analysis and pathway analysis were performed using the Gene Ontology website and Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes. A protein-protein interaction network was constructed based on the Search Tool for the retrieval of Interacting Genes/Proteins. Transcription factors (TFs) of differentially expressed genes were identified based on TRANSFAC database and then a regulatory network was constructed. RESULTS Through constructing the dysregulated ceRNA network, 6 genes (HSPA4L, PANK3, YOD1, CTNNBIP1, EVI2B, ITGAL) and 3 miRNAs (miR-125a-3p, miR-200a, miR-142-3p) were detected. Three lncRNAs (MALAT1, TUG1, FGD5-AS1) were found to target both miR-125a-3p and miR-142-3p in this ceRNA network. Protein-protein interaction network analysis identified several hub genes, including VCAM1, ITGA4, UBC, LYN and SSX2IP. Three pathways (cytokine-cytokine receptor, cell adhesion molecules, chemokine signaling pathway) were identified to be overlapping results with the previous bioinformatics studies in periodontitis. Moreover, 2 TFs including FOS and EGR were identified to be involved in the regulatory network of the differentially expressed genes-TFs in periodontitis. CONCLUSION These findings suggest that 6 mRNAs (HSPA4L, PANK3, YOD1, CTNNBIP1, EVI2B, ITGAL), 3 miRNAs (hsa-miR-125a-3p, hsa-miR-200a, hsa-miR-142-3p) and 3 lncRNAs (MALAT1, TUG1, FGD5-AS1) might be involved in the lncRNA-associated ceRNA network of periodontitis. This study sought to illuminate further the genetic and epigenetic mechanisms of periodontitis through constructing an lncRNA-associated ceRNA network.


Gerodontology | 2017

Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors and dental implant failure—A significant concern in elders?

Bhumija Gupta; Aneesha Acharya; Georgios Pelekos; Dharmarajan Gopalakrishnan; Antonia Kolokythas

OBJECTIVE Depression is a significantly prevalent health concern in geriatric populations. Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor drugs (SSRI) are the most commonly prescribed antidepressant agents, with increasing rates of prescription. The present report aimed to present a concise review of the current understanding regarding SSRI effects on bone and dental implant outcomes. MATERIALS AND METHODS A broad-based review and summary of literature pertaining to the effects of SSRI on bone metabolism and on dental implant survival was performed. RESULTS The available literature indicates that serotonin plays a significant role in bone metabolism and experimental reports demonstrate adverse impacts of SSRI on multiple pathways of bone metabolism. Early clinical reports suggest detrimental effects of SSRI on dental implant survival. The type of SSRI drug, dosage and host-related genetic and metabolic factors could be potential modulating factors. There is a paucity of data regarding SSRI usage and dental implant survival specific to geriatric cohorts. CONCLUSION As older individuals comprise a high-risk group for both high oral rehabilitation and SSRI use, clinicians should be aware the potential association between SSRI and dental implant failures. Well-designed investigations specific to geriatric cohorts are essential to understand the implications of SSRI use on dental implant prognosis.

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Rory M. Watt

University of Hong Kong

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Yuki Chan

University of Hong Kong

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Jia Hao

Tokyo Medical and Dental University

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Hongying Pan

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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