Periodontitis: Consensus report of workgroup 2 of the 2017 World Workshop on the Classification of Periodontal and Peri‐Implant Diseases and Conditions

Panos N. Papapanou(Columbia University), Mariano Sanz(Universidad Complutense de Madrid), Nurcan Buduneli(Ege University), Thomas Dietrich(Birmingham City University), Magda Feres(Guarulhos University), Daniel H. Fine(Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey), Thomas F. Flemmig(Education University of Hong Kong), Raul I. García(Boston University), William V. Giannobile(University of Michigan), Filippo Graziani(University of Pisa), Henry Greenwell(University of Louisville), David Herrera(Universidad Complutense de Madrid), Richard T. Kao(Durect (United States)), Moritz Kebschull(University of Bonn), Denis F. Kinane(University of Pennsylvania), Keith L. Kirkwood(University at Buffalo, State University of New York), Thomas Kocher(Universitätsmedizin Greifswald), Kenneth S. Kornman(University of Michigan), Purnima Kumar(The Ohio State University), Bruno G. Loos(Academic Center for Dentistry Amsterdam), Eli E. Machtei(Rambam Health Care Campus), Huanxin Meng(Peking University), Andrea Mombelli(University of Geneva), Ian Needleman(University College London), Steven Offenbacher(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), G. J. Seymour(The University of Queensland), Ricardo Teles(University of Pennsylvania), Maurizio S. Tonetti(Education University of Hong Kong)
Journal of Periodontology
June 1, 2018
Cited by 3,112Open Access
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Abstract

A new periodontitis classification scheme has been adopted, in which forms of the disease previously recognized as "chronic" or "aggressive" are now grouped under a single category ("periodontitis") and are further characterized based on a multi-dimensional staging and grading system. Staging is largely dependent upon the severity of disease at presentation as well as on the complexity of disease management, while grading provides supplemental information about biological features of the disease including a history-based analysis of the rate of periodontitis progression; assessment of the risk for further progression; analysis of possible poor outcomes of treatment; and assessment of the risk that the disease or its treatment may negatively affect the general health of the patient. Necrotizing periodontal diseases, whose characteristic clinical phenotype includes typical features (papilla necrosis, bleeding, and pain) and are associated with host immune response impairments, remain a distinct periodontitis category. Endodontic-periodontal lesions, defined by a pathological communication between the pulpal and periodontal tissues at a given tooth, occur in either an acute or a chronic form, and are classified according to signs and symptoms that have direct impact on their prognosis and treatment. Periodontal abscesses are defined as acute lesions characterized by localized accumulation of pus within the gingival wall of the periodontal pocket/sulcus, rapid tissue destruction and are associated with risk for systemic dissemination.


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