Temperature Differences at Periodontal Sites in Health and Disease
- 1 January 1992
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in The Journal of Periodontology
- Vol. 63 (1) , 24-27
- https://doi.org/10.1902/jop.1992.63.1.24
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to determine if a thermocouple probe was capable of detecting differences in temperatures between healthy and diseased periodontal sites. Twenty‐two patients, 11 with radiographic evidence of periodontitis and 11 without, were probed twice with the temperature probe, and twice with a conventional probe by two examiners. Two definitions of health and disease were used. Definition one was that any site probing 5 mm or a site that bled upon probing was considered diseased. Sites 4 mm and with no bleeding on probing were considered healthy. Mean temperature differences were calculated from a baseline sublingual temperature. Each arch and tooth demonstrated different temperatures with temperatures decreasing from posterior to anterior. Differences from baseline between healthy and diseased sites were consistently higher for diseased sites. For example, maxillary second molars were 0.72° C higher than baseline while the maxillary central incisors were 1.40° C higher than baseline. Mean temperature differences between healthy and diseased sites were significant (P < 0.005) for all sites. Definition two was developed since all sites 5 mm or greater and all sites which bled may not be diseased, the data were recalculated with disease including all sites ≥ 5 mm with bleeding on probing and health including all sites ≤ 3 mm without bleeding. With this definition the mean temperature difference between healthy and diseased sites was even greater. Maxillary second molars were 0.96° C higher, while maxillary central incisors were 1.76° C higher. Differences were significant (P < 0.0005) at all sites. In conclusion, the temperature probe was capable of detecting temperature differences between healthy and diseased periodontal sites and might be an effective instrument in monitoring periodontal health. J Periodontol 1992; 63:24–27.Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Temperature as a periodontal diagnosticJournal of Clinical Periodontology, 1990
- Clinical parameters as predictors of destructive periodontal disease activityJournal of Clinical Periodontology, 1983
- Measurement of human gingival sulcus temperatureJournal of Periodontal Research, 1978
- Microscopic evaluation of clinical measurements of connective tissue attachment levelsJournal of Clinical Periodontology, 1977