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The aim of this study was to evaluate the effects of alcohol and nicotine, when used alone or simulta
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neously, on the alveolar bone loss area resulting from ligature-induced periodontitis in rats.
Study design:
Forty adult male rats received a cotton ligature in the first lower molar sulcular area, and the animals
were randomly assigned to different treatments (n = 10, each group) including daily peritoneal injections of saline
solution (group A), submitted to self-administration of alcohol 25% (group B), nicotine solution in concentration
0.19 ?l/ml (group C), and nicotine solution in concentration 0.19 ?l/ml plus self-administration of alcohol 25%
(group D). Five weeks later, the animals were sacrificed, and the samples were routinely processed for semi-serial
decalcified sections.
Results:
Ligated teeth showed more alveolar bone loss than unligated ones (p < 0.05). Unligated teeth showed no
significant differences between each other (p > 0.05). Analyses between the ligated teeth showed that the group C
(nicotine) or group B (alcohol 25%) each had increasing alveolar bone loss in the furcation area, and the simulta
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neous combination alcohol and nicotine (group D) intensified these ef
fects (p < 0.05).
Conclusion:
The results suggest that the simultaneous combination of alcohol and nicotine have a synergistic effect
in the progression of periodontitis, evidenced by increased furcation region bone destruction in periodontal disease in rats.
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