ANTIMICROBIAL MODULATOR OF INFLAMMATORY RESPONSE IN THIRD MOLAR SURGERY COMPARED WITH CONVENTIONAL MEDICATION

Authors

  • Michel Rodrigues Moreira
  • Rodrigo Pascoal Carneiro
  • Dárcio Rodrigues Freire
  • Thiago Guimarães
  • Geraldo Geraldo Batista de Melo

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.19177/jrd.v7e5201983-86

Keywords:

Doxycycline, Drug delivery, Modulation of inflammatory response, Oral and maxillofacial surgery.

Abstract

Surgeries performed in retained third molars occur in the contaminated field, bringing post-operative
problems such as pain, bleeding, discomfort, swelling, infection, trismus, and inactive days. This study
evaluated the differences between conventional medication and topical doxycycline in third molar surgery.
Twenty-eight patients were selected requiring removal of four third molar. Half of the mouth was randomly
selected to undergo surgery with the use of conventional medication (analgesic, anti-inflammatory and
antimicrobial) and after 25-30 days, the other half of the mouth was subjected to surgery using doxycycline
delivered through gel nanotubes. The results showed that in both treatments there was no clinical infection.
The other evaluations were significantly lower in relation to pain, bleeding, edema, inactive days, trismus, and
discomfort when compared with conventional therapy.

Published

2020-03-30

Issue

Section

Articles