Priscila Corraini
University of São Paulo
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Featured researches published by Priscila Corraini.
Journal of Clinical Periodontology | 2011
Ecinele Francisca Rosa; Priscila Corraini; Verônica Franco de Carvalho; Gislene Inoue; Elaine Fueta Gomes; João Paulo Becker Lotufo; Giorgio De Micheli; Cláudio Mendes Pannuti
AIM The aim of this 12-month prospective study was to assess the adjunctive effect of smoking cessation in non-surgical periodontal therapy of subjects with severe chronic periodontitis. MATERIALS AND METHODS Of the 201 subjects enrolled from a smoking cessation clinic, 93 were eligible and received non-surgical periodontal treatment and concurrent smoking cessation treatment. Periodontal maintenance was performed every 3 months. Full-mouth periodontal examination in six sites per tooth was performed by a calibrated examiner, blinded to smoking status, at baseline, 3, 6 and 12 months after non-surgical periodontal treatment. Furthermore, expired air carbon monoxide concentration measurements and interviews based on a structured questionnaire were performed in order to collect demographic and smoking data. RESULTS Of the 93 eligible subjects, 52 remained in the study after 1 year. Of these, 17 quit smoking and 35 continued smoking or oscillated. After 1 year, only quitters presented significant clinical attachment gain (p=0.04). However, there were no differences between the groups regarding clinical attachment level, probing depth, bleeding on probing and plaque index after 1 year (p>0.05). CONCLUSION Smoking cessation promoted clinical attachment gain in chronic periodontitis subjects from a smoking cessation clinic after 1 year of follow-up.
Archives of Oral Biology | 2010
Caio Vinícius Gonçalves Roman-Torres; Davi Romeiro Aquino; Sheila Cavalca Cortelli; Gilson Cesar Nobre Franco; Juliana Guimarães dos Santos; Priscila Corraini; Marinella Holzhausen; Marina Gonçalves Diniz; Ricardo Santiago Gomez; José Roberto Cortelli
OBJECTIVE Previous studies have suggested that Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans is involved in the aetiology of aggressive periodontitis as well as chronic periodontitis. In addition, some authors have also reported that serotype-specific antigens of A. actinomycetemcomitans determine the severity of disease. This study aimed to elucidate the prevalence of A. actinomycetemcomitans and the distribution of A. actinomycetemcomitans serotypes in Brazilian subjects with chronic periodontitis. DESIGN A total of 486 individuals were enrolled in this survey. All patients received clinical examinations that included periodontal pocket depth, clinical attachment loss, plaque, and gingival indexes. Subgingival samples were taken for microbial analysis. The genomic DNA of A. actinomycetemcomitans was provided by PCR. RESULTS Out of 486 subjects examined, A. actinomycetemcomitans was isolated in 85 (17.5%) individuals. Out of 85 positive samples, 68 were infected by at least 1 serotype, 7 by mixed infection, and 10 were non-serotyped. Serotypes d and f were not detected. Serotype c showed the highest prevalence (52.9%), followed by serotype a (31.8%). CONCLUSIONS Intragroup analysis revealed that, in slight/moderate periodontitis, serotypes c and a were significantly more prevalent than serotypes b and d-f; the prevalence of serotype c in severe periodontitis was significantly greater than that of serotypes a and b. Our data were similar in Asian and Eurasian populations.
Acta Odontologica Scandinavica | 2009
Priscila Corraini; Vibeke Baelum; Cláudio Mendes Pannuti; Alessandro Nautili Pustiglioni; Giuseppe Alexandre Romito; Francisco Emílio Pustiglioni
Objective. The aim of this study was to assess the prevalence, extent, and risk indicators of tooth loss in an isolated population of Brazil. Material and methods. Two-hundred-and-forty-two subjects, ranging in age from 14 to 82 years (mean 36.2 years), were identified by census in an isolated population of Brazil. All consenting subjects received a full-mouth clinical (DFT index and information about missing teeth) and periodontal examination of 6 sites per tooth. Furthermore, they were interviewed using a structured written questionnaire in order to gather information about demographic, environmental, and biological variables. Results. Of the 200 subjects (80% response rate), 19 (9.5%) were edentulous, 90% had lost at least one tooth, and 39% had lost more than 8 teeth. The mean number of teeth lost was 9.5 (95% CI = 8.2–10.8). First mandibular molars were the most commonly missing teeth. In a multiple logistic regression analysis based on a theoretical hierarchical model of tooth loss, having more than 8 teeth lost was strongly associated with adult age (OR = 18.3–17.3, 95% CIs = 4.8–69.7 and 4.0–75.1) and female gender (OR = 5.9, 95% CI = 1.9–18.2) in the final model. Conclusions. Tooth loss was highly prevalent and extensive in this isolated population. Demographic and behavioral factors played an important role in tooth loss prevalence in this population.
Journal of Clinical Periodontology | 2011
Isabella Maria Porto de Araujo Britto; Manuel H. Aguiar-Oliveira; Luiz A. Oliveira-Neto; Roberto Salvatori; Anita H. O. Souza; Vanessa P. Araujo; Priscila Corraini; Cláudio Mendes Pannuti; Giuseppe Alexandre Romito; Francisco Emílio Pustiglioni
AIM The aim of this study was to investigate the possible associations between isolated growth hormone deficiency (IGHD) and periodontal attachment loss (PAL) in adults affected by congenital IGHD. MATERIALS AND METHODS Forty-five previously identified IGHD subjects were eligible for this study. The final study sample comprised 32 cases (gender:20M/12F; age:44.8 ± 17.5) matched for age, gender, diabetes, smoking status and income to 32 controls (non-IGHD subjects). Participants were submitted to a full-mouth clinical examination of six sites per tooth and were interviewed using a structured, written questionnaire. Periodontitis was defined as proximal PAL≥5 mm affecting ≥30% of teeth. RESULTS No significant differences were observed in the percentage of sites with visible plaque between IGHD and non-IGHD subjects (59.4% versus 46.9%, p=0.32). IGHD subjects had significant less supragingival calculus (31.3% versus 59.4%, p=0.02) and more bleeding on probing (71.9% versus 18.8%, p<0.01) than controls. PAL≥5 mm was significantly more prevalent (100% versus 71.9%, p<0.01) and affected more teeth (30.5% versus 6.7%, p<0.01) in cases than in controls. After adjusting for supragingival calculus, IGHD cases had a higher likelihood of having periodontitis than controls (OR=17.4-17.8, 95% CI=2.3-134.9, p=0.004-0.005). CONCLUSION Congenital IGHD subjects have a greater chance of having PAL.
Brazilian Oral Research | 2009
Priscila Corraini; Cláudio Mendes Pannuti; Alessandro Nautili Pustiglioni; Giuseppe Alexandre Romito; Francisco Emílio Pustiglioni
This study aimed to assess the prevalence of aggressive periodontitis (AgP), and to investigate the association between demographic, socioeconomic and behavioral risk indicators with AgP in an untreated and isolated young population in Southeastern Brazil. For this cross-sectional survey, 134 subjects aged 12-29 years were selected by a census. Of those eligible, 101 subjects received a full-mouth clinical examination, and were interviewed using a structured written questionnaire. Cases were defined as individuals with 4 or more teeth with attachment loss > 4 mm or > 5 mm in the age groups 12-19 and 20-29, respectively. Overall, 9.9% of the subjects presented AgP (10.3% of the 12-19-year-olds and 9.7% of the 20-29-year-olds). The only risk indicator significantly associated with AgP in this isolated population was a high proportion of sites (> 30%) presenting supragingival calculus [OR = 23.2]. Having experienced an urgency dental treatment was a protective factor for AgP [OR = 0.1]. The authors concluded that this isolated and untreated population from Brazil presented a high prevalence of AgP. Local plaque-retaining factors played a major role in the prevalence of AgP in this isolated population, and should be included in further studies evaluating this destructive periodontal disease form.
Acta Odontologica Scandinavica | 2013
Priscila Corraini; Vibeke Baelum; Cláudio Mendes Pannuti; Giuseppe Alexandre Romito; Davi Romeiro Aquino; Sheila Cavalca Cortelli; José Roberto Cortelli; Francisco Emílio Pustiglioni
AIMS To describe the subgingival microbial profiles of the major putative periodontal pathogens and investigate their role as diagnostic markers for destructive periodontal diseases in an untreated and isolated population. MATERIALS AND METHODS The source population consisted of all subjects aged ≥ 12 years in an isolated Brazilian population. An interview and a full-mouth clinical examination were conducted and subgingival plaque samples were obtained from four sites per subject. PCR analyses were used to identify the following micro-organisms: Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans, Porphyromonas gingivalis, Tannerella forsythia, Prevotella intermedia and Campylobacter rectus. RESULTS Among the 214 clinically examined subjects (81% response), 170 of the 195 dentate subjects provided plaque samples. Two subgingival microbial profiles were identified: absence of all micro-organisms but Campylobacter rectus or co-occurrence of Tannerella forsythia and Porphyromonas gingivalis. Using a combination of microbiological and interview information, the smallest overall misclassification in the diagnosis of extensive clinical attachment loss ≥ 5 mm was 8.8% (4.7% of non-cases and 22% of cases), but this was not different from the 7.6% (2.3% non-cases and 24.4% cases) obtained using clinical and interview information (p = 0.292). CONCLUSION Specific microbial profiles could be identified in this isolated population. They did not result in significant superior diagnostic accuracy when compared to traditional clinical markers.
Brazilian Oral Research | 2016
Gislene Inoue; Ecinele Francisca Rosa; Elaine Fueta Gomes; Mariana Rocha Guglielmetti; Priscila Corraini; Ricardo Koji Takano; Viviane Lé Ferreira; Giuseppe Alexandre Romito; João Paulo Becker Lotufo; Edinalva Tanajura Cruz Souza; Cláudio Mendes Pannuti
The purpose of this 24-month study was to identify predictors of smoking cessation in a cohort of smokers with chronic periodontitis, attending a multidisciplinary smoking cessation program. Of the 286 subjects screened, 116 were included and received non-surgical periodontal treatment and smoking cessation therapy, which consisted of lectures, cognitive behavioral therapy, and pharmacotherapy, according to their individual needs. During initial periodontal treatment, dentists actively motivated the study subjects to stop smoking, using motivational interviewing techniques. Further smoking cessation counseling and support were also provided by the dentists, during periodontal maintenance sessions at 3, 6, 12 and 24 months of follow-up. Smoking status was assessed by means of a structured questionnaire, and was validated by exhaled carbon monoxide (CO) measurements. The Fagerström Test for Cigarette Dependence was used to assess smoking dependence. Of the 61 individuals that remained up to the 24-month examination, 31, 21 and 18 declared that they were not smoking at 3, 12 and 24 months, respectively. Smoking cessation after 24 months was associated with the male gender (OR = 3.77, 95%CI = 1.16-12.30), baseline CO levels less than 10ppm (OR = 5.81, 95%CI 1.76-19.23), not living or working with another smoker (OR = 7.38, 95%CI 1.76-30.98) and a lower mean Fagerström test score (OR = 5.63, 95%CI 1.55-20.43). We concluded that smoking cessation was associated with demographic, smoking history and cigarette dependence variables.
Community Dentistry and Oral Epidemiology | 2015
Priscila Corraini; Rodrigo López; Michael Væth
OBJECTIVE This study aimed to evaluate and compare the misclassification of periodontitis using two operational protocols currently employed in research, as a result of intra-examiner less-than-perfect reliability of their formative clinical parameters. METHODS Full-mouth duplicate recordings (six sites per tooth) of probing depth (PD) and clinical attachment level (CAL) were obtained by a single examiner, 1 week apart, from 148 adults with self-perceived need for periodontal treatment. They were used to classify periodontitis subjects according to the protocols proposed by the 5th European Workshop in Periodontology (EWP5) and the collaboration between the US Centre for Diseases Control and Prevention and the American Academy of Periodontology (CDC-AAP). RESULTS Hundred percent and 91.2% of the subjects were classified as periodontitis cases according to the EWP5 and CDC-AAP protocols, respectively. Test-retest agreement was observed in 95% and 85% of the classified subjects according to the EWP5 and CDC-AAP protocols, respectively. The difference was statistically significant (P < 0.01). Alignment of protocols, in terms of number of classification categories, resulted in a similar test-retest agreement of 95% using the EWP5 protocol for extensive periodontitis and 90% using the CDC-AAP protocol for severe periodontitis (P = 0.09). Misclassification was nondifferential when subjects were classified according either to the EWP5 or the aligned CDC-AAP protocols, while the reliability using the original CDC-AAP protocol depended on the extent of bleeding on probing, CAL ≥3 mm and PD ≥4 mm. CONCLUSION This study suggests the EWP5 protocol is less error-prone than the CDC-AAP protocol in adult subjects with perceived need for periodontal treatment, as a result of intra-examiner less-than-perfect reliability of periodontal clinical parameters. Extensive or severe cases presented similar misclassification. Further studies using survey-like conditions are recommended to confirm these findings.
Clinical Oral Investigations | 2015
Priscila Corraini; Rodrigo López
ObjectivesTo assess the intra-examiner reliability of recordings of subgingival calculus detected using an ultrasonic device, and to investigate the influence of subject-, tooth- and site-level factors on the reliability of these subgingival calculus recordings.Materials and methodsOn two occasions, within a 1-week interval, 147 adult periodontitis patients received a full-mouth clinical periodontal examination by a single trained examiner. Duplicate subgingival calculus recordings, in six sites per tooth, were obtained using an ultrasonic device for calculus detection and removal.ResultsAgreement was observed in 65 % of the 22,584 duplicate subgingival calculus recordings, ranging 45 % to 83 % according to subject. Using hierarchical modeling, disagreements in the subgingival calculus duplicate recordings were more likely in all other sites than the mid-buccal, and in sites harboring supragingival calculus. Disagreements were less likely in sites with PD ≥ 4 mm and with furcation involvement ≥ degree 2. Bleeding on probing or suppuration did not influence the reliability of subgingival calculus. At the subject-level, disagreements were less likely in patients presenting with the highest and lowest extent categories of the covariate subgingival calculus.Conclusions and clinical relevanceThe reliability of subgingival calculus recordings using the ultrasound technology is reasonable. The results of the present study suggest that the reliability of subgingival calculus recordings is not influenced by the presence of inflammation. Moreover, subgingival calculus can be more reliably detected using the ultrasound device at sites with higher need for periodontal therapy, i.e., sites presenting with deep pockets and premolars and molars with furcation involvement.
Journal of Periodontology | 2008
Priscila Corraini; Vibeke Baelum; Cláudio Mendes Pannuti; Alessandro Nautili Pustiglioni; Giuseppe Alexandre Romito; Francisco Emílio Pustiglioni