DOI: 10.18481/2077-7566-2026-22-2-63-69 ISSN: 2077-7566

CHANGES IN THE BLOOD CHEMISTRY VALUES IN THE COURSE OF THE TREATMENT OF THE RAPIDLY PROGRESSIVE PERIODONTITIS

Ol'ga Uspenskaya, Evgeniya Kachesova, Aleksey Aleksandrov, Elena Shevchenko, Aleksandr Dolgalev, Artur Heigetyan, Maryan Karammaeva

Background. Studies on the relationship between bone tissue osteoporosis and the development of chronic generalized periodontitis are known in medicine; however, data on bone tissue changes in young patients with rapidly progressive periodontitis are insufficient. Subject. Changes in radiographic bone density of the jaws and systemic bone mineral density (BMD) in young patients with rapidly progressive periodontitis. Objective. To study the radiographic pattern of bone tissue in patients with rapidly progressive periodontitis. Methodology. A total of 58 subjects were observed, of whom 48 were undergoing treatment for rapidly progressive periodontitis. Ten individuals comprised the control group and had no periodontal disease. Radiological examination of all patients included densitometry of the proximal femur and lumbar spine. Computed tomography and orthopantomography were performed to assess changes in the jawbone tissue. All patients were divided into two groups according to periodontitis severity. Results. The results of the study demonstrated changes in the jawbone tissue as well as systemic alterations in patients treated for rapidly progressive periodontitis compared to healthy controls. BMD levels in these groups were significantly lower than in the control group (p < 0.05). No significant differences were found between the first and second groups; the bone tissue changes occurring in rapidly progressive periodontitis did not differ between patients with different disease severity. Conclusion. Patients with rapidly progressive periodontitis exhibit both local changes in the radiographic structure of the jawbone tissue and a systemic decrease in bone mineral density.

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