Robert L. Jeffcoat
University of Pennsylvania
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Featured researches published by Robert L. Jeffcoat.
American Journal of Preventive Medicine | 2014
Marjorie K. Jeffcoat; Robert L. Jeffcoat; Patricia A. Gladowski; James B. Bramson; Jerome J. Blum
BACKGROUND Treatment of periodontal (gum) disease may lessen the adverse consequences of some chronic systemic conditions. PURPOSE To estimate the effects of periodontal therapy on medical costs and hospitalizations among individuals with diagnosed type 2 diabetes (T2D); coronary artery disease (CAD); cerebral vascular disease (CVD); rheumatoid arthritis (RA); and pregnancy in a retrospective observational cohort study. METHODS Insurance claims data from 338,891 individuals with both medical and dental insurance coverage were analyzed in 2011-2013. Inclusion criteria were (1) a diagnosis of at least one of the five specified systemic conditions and (2) evidence of periodontal disease. Subjects were categorized according to whether they had completed treatment for periodontal disease in the baseline year, 2005. Outcomes were (1) total allowed medical costs and (2) number of hospitalizations, per subscriber per year, in 2005-2009. Except in the case of pregnancy, outcomes were aggregated without regard to reported cause. Individuals who were treated and untreated for periodontal disease were compared independently for the two outcomes and five systemic conditions using ANCOVA; age, gender, and T2D status were covariates. RESULTS Statistically significant reductions in both outcomes (p<0.05) were found for T2D, CVD, CAD, and pregnancy, for which costs were lower by 40.2%, 40.9%, 10.7%, and 73.7%, respectively; results for hospital admissions were comparable. No treatment effect was observed in the RA cohorts. CONCLUSIONS These cost-based results provide new, independent, and potentially valuable evidence that simple, noninvasive periodontal therapy may improve health outcomes in pregnancy and other systemic conditions.
Injury Prevention | 2007
Janet Weiner; Douglas J. Wiebe; Therese S. Richmond; Kristen Beam; Alan L Berman; Charles C. Branas; Rose A. Cheney; Tamera Coyne-Beasley; John Firman; Martin Fishbein; Stephen W. Hargarten; David Hemenway; Robert L. Jeffcoat; David W. Kennedy; Christopher S. Koper; Jean Lemaire; Matthew Miller; Jeffrey A. Roth; C. William Schwab; Robert Spitzer; Stephen P. Teret; Jon S. Vernick; Daniel W. Webster
In the United States, firearms are involved in tens of thousands of deaths and injuries each year. The magnitude of this problem prompted the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) to issue a report in 2004 detailing the strengths and limitations of existing research on the relationship between firearms and violence. In response, a multidisciplinary group of experts in the field of firearms and violence formed the National Research Collaborative on Firearm Violence. The Collaborative met for 2 days in June 2005 to (1) critically review the main findings of the NAS report and (2) define a research agenda that could fill research and data gaps and inform policy that reduces gun-related crime, deaths and injuries. This article summarizes the Collaborative’s conclusions and identifies priorities for research and funding.
IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering | 1991
Marjorie K. Jeffcoat; Robert L. Jeffcoat; Kushroo Captain
An automated periodontal probe has been developed to measure pocket depth and attachment loss in a single measurement under controlled force conditions. A natural anatomic landmark, the cemento-enamel junction (CEJ), is used as a reference for attachment-level measurements. The CEJ is detected automatically by immediate digital postprocessing of simultaneous measurements of probe-tip acceleration and displacement during probing. Clinical trials in the beagle dog model for naturally occurring periodontitis have shown that the automated probe, when used with 35-g probing force, has a repeatability of 0.13 mm and a bias of 0.09 mm, indicating that the automated periodontal probe is capable of attachment-level measurements with a high degree of repeatability and validity.<<ETX>>
Journal of Periodontology | 2014
Marjorie K. Jeffcoat; Robert L. Jeffcoat; Nipul Tanna; Samuel H. Parry
BACKGROUND Clinical evidence suggests an association between preterm birth and periodontal disease. This study explores whether specific genetic polymorphisms are associated with success of periodontal therapy in pregnant women with periodontal disease and, further, whether any of these same polymorphisms are also associated with spontaneous preterm birth (sPTB). METHODS One hundred sixty high-risk pregnant women (6 to 20 weeks of gestation) with periodontal disease (≥ 3 sites with attachment loss ≥ 4 mm) were studied. All women received scaling and root planing plus oral hygiene instruction. Periodontal examinations were performed before treatment and 20 weeks later. Participants were classified according to two study outcomes: 1) success or failure of periodontal treatment; and 2) presence or absence of sPTB. Maternal DNA samples from mucosal swabs were characterized using a 1536-SNP (single-nucleotide polymorphism) custom polymerase chain reaction chip. A probabilistic model of each dichotomous outcome, derived using a stepwise Bayesian procedure, was compared to respective null hypotheses on the basis of Monte Carlo simulations and significance estimates obtained using three measures (z-test, Welch t-test, and probability convolution). The models were further confirmed by logistic regression analyses. RESULTS The models revealed a significant relation between a specific polymorphism of prostaglandin E receptor 3 (a gene associated with inflammatory response) and both periodontal treatment failure (odds ratio 11.09, P <0.0002) and sPTB (odds ratio 6.89, P < 0.0032). CONCLUSIONS These results demonstrate that the risk of unsuccessful periodontal treatment is associated with tag SNPs in specific genes that regulate the inflammatory response, one of which is also associated with sPTB.
International Journal of Oral & Maxillofacial Implants | 2002
Nico C. Geurs; Robert L. Jeffcoat; Edwin A. McGlumphy; Michael S. Reddy; Marjorie K. Jeffcoat
Journal of Periodontology | 2000
Michael S. Reddy; Nico C. Geurs; Robert L. Jeffcoat; Howard M. Proskin; Marjorie K. Jeffcoat
Archive | 2000
Robert L. Jeffcoat; Lance C. Ramp
International Journal of Oral & Maxillofacial Implants | 2007
Howard M. Proskin; Robert L. Jeffcoat; Annette Catlin; Jillian Campbell; Marjorie K. Jeffcoat
International Journal of Oral & Maxillofacial Implants | 2000
Lance C. Ramp; Michael S. Reddy; Robert L. Jeffcoat
Revista Internacional de Odontología Restauradora & Periodoncia | 2002
Michael S. Reddy; Nico C. Geurs; Wang Ic; Perng-Ru Liu; Yung-Tsung Hsu; Robert L. Jeffcoat; Marjorie K. Jeffcoat