Host Modulation in Periodontology: Redefining Therapy Beyond Scaling and Root Planing
Pankaj Dewanjee, Anootpal Gogoi, Shubham K Srivastava, Chinmoy Sikdar, Akshim Rana

TL;DR
Periodontal therapy is moving beyond mechanical cleaning to include host response modulation for better disease management and tissue regeneration.
Contribution
The paper introduces host modulation as a novel therapeutic approach in periodontology, shifting focus from pathogen control to host response regulation.
Findings
Host-mediated inflammation plays a critical role in periodontal disease progression.
Adjunctive agents like subantimicrobial doxycycline and pro-resolving lipid mediators show promise in reducing inflammation and promoting tissue repair.
Integrating host modulation into periodontal care can lead to improved long-term outcomes and personalized treatment strategies.
Abstract
The management of periodontal diseases has traditionally centered on mechanical debridement through scaling and root planing, a cornerstone of periodontal therapy. While effective in reducing bacterial load and disrupting biofilm, this approach alone does not fully address the complex host-mediated inflammatory pathways that drive disease progression and tissue destruction. Advances in molecular biology and immunology have revealed the critical role of host response modulation in periodontal pathogenesis, leading to the development of adjunctive therapeutic strategies that go beyond mechanical intervention. Emerging agents, such as subantimicrobial dose doxycycline, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, pro-resolving lipid mediators, and host-targeted biologics, demonstrate potential in attenuating destructive inflammation while promoting resolution and regeneration. This editorial…
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Taxonomy
Topicsdental development and anomalies · Periodontal Regeneration and Treatments · Bone and Dental Protein Studies
