Supplementation With L-ornithine But Not L-arginine Increases Density of CD68+ and CD163+ Macrophages in Periodontitis

NCT ID: NCT05042024 Phase: PHASE3 Status: COMPLETED Enrollment: 75 Completion: 2018-11-01

Conditions

Periodontitis

Interventions

Scaling and root planing, Oral L-arginine aspartate administration, Oral L-ornithine aspartate administration

Summary

The aim of the study was to investigate whether oral administration of L-arginine or L-ornithine could modulate local representation density and ratio of macrophages in periodontitis-affected gingiva by using immunohistochemical detection of CD68+ and CD163+ macrophages in biopsies of the gingiva.

The null hypothesis tested was that L-arginine and L-ornithine have no influences on CD68+ and CD163+ macrophages densities when supplementing the treatment of periodontitis.

Materials and methods. 75 individuals with a diagnosis of generalized periodontitis at stages II-III and grade B (38 women and 37 men, 51% and 49%, respectively) were included in the study. Periodontitis was diagnosed by using the criteria of the Classification of Periodontal and Peri-Implant Diseases and Conditions 2017. 25 patients received scaling and root planing only; 25 patients additionally received L-arginine, and 25 - L-ornithine, according to instructions available in Ukraine.

For the immunohistochemical study of paraffin-embedded sections, the gingival biopsy was taken from 5 selected patients per group before treatment and after 1 month. CD68+ (cluster of differentiation 68 positive) and CD163+ cells served as a morphological equivalent of M1, M2 macrophages subpopulations, and their densities were calculated per 10000 μm2. Statistical analysis was performed by adequate power methods.

Primary Outcome

Periodontal pocket depth (PPD)

Source

ClinicalTrials.gov