Periodontal disease NYC | WorldClassid http://worldclassid.com Best marketing you can get Wed, 17 Apr 2019 17:51:30 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.3 194741333 The Economy Is Still On Its Knees, Yet This Periodontal Start-Up Stands Tall http://worldclassid.com/profiles/blogs/uncategorized/the-economy-is-still-on-its/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=the-economy-is-still-on-its Wed, 17 Apr 2019 17:51:30 +0000 http://worldclassid.com/profiles/blogs/the-economy-is-still-on-its/ With commercial rents still high and professional space hard to find in New York City, Central Park Periodontics has defied current market trends by creating a full-service periodontal practice that specializes in dental implants, the treatment of periodontal disease, and laser gum surgery. It has done so with a rare blend of an experienced clinician […]

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With commercial rents still high and professional space hard to find in New York City, Central Park Periodontics has defied current market trends by creating a full-service periodontal practice that specializes in dental implants, the treatment of periodontal disease, and laser gum surgery. It has done so with a rare blend of an experienced clinician and three associates.

Central Park Periodontics is unique by launching a new dental practice in this economy. And more so because it specializes in periodontics, implants and laser gum surgery.

Why create a new dental practice in the midst of troubled economic times? “The city was ripe for a periodontal practice that caters more to the individual needs of each patient than to a by-the-book-formulaic approach to patients,” says founder and president, Dr. Alan A. Winter, who is a board-certified Diplomate of the American Board of Periodontology. “Every patient is different and every clinical periodontal and dental problem can be handled by more than one modality.” Dr. Winter went on to say, “While periodontal surgery is effective when needed, it is not the only way to treat gum disease. Improved oral hygiene, effective root planing and scaling, and laser gum treatments can also be effective treatment modalities for bleeding gums and periodontal pockets.”

How else does Central Park Periodontics blend new technologies with its unique brand of personalized periodontal and dental implant treatments? They utilize state-of-the art digital X-rays that reduce radiation to a minimum; have evolved into a “green” practice by eliminating most forms of paper and charts, and embrace technologies such as electronic submission of insurance forms, contacting patients via email or texting, and posting the New Patient Health Questionnaire that can be completed on their website in order to save time during that first office visit.

But being a new practice, does not mean that the periodontists of Central Park Periodontics are fresh out of school or inexperienced at performing complex periodontal surgeries, inserting endosseous dental implants, treating root recessions with gum grafts and more. Founded by Dr. Alan A. Winter, Central Park Periodontics blends his more than three decades of dental experiences as a clinician, teacher, scientific writer, and lecturer with his younger associates, Drs. Samantha Aaron, Navid Baradarian, and Julia Sivitz, who are highly trained in osseointegration, sinus grafts, and the best ways to approach the complex links of periodontal disease with systemic diseases such as heart disease or strokes.

Central Park Periodontics was created in a series of bold moves. “I went to fifty periodontal practices over the course of one year,” says Tufts Dental School graduate, Dr. Julia Sivitz, “and no one would offer me a job.” Likewise, Dr. Samantha Aaron – a graduate of NYU’s dental college – interviewed at a number of established periodontal practices that yielded the same result: no job offer. Dr. Navid Baradarian’s story differs in that he received extra training in a general dental residency and then practiced family dentistry for a year before returning to dental school to earn his periodontal certificate from UMDNJ (the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey). His experience taught him to seize and opportunity and he did so by buying a small periodontal practice in Brooklyn. “For me, though, I always wanted to practice periodontics in Manhattan and Central Park Periodontics offers me that opportunity.”

The blend of young and old makes Central Park Periodontics special. In this economic environment, like many others, dentists find they need to tighten their belts and delay retirement by practicing longer. The last thing they would consider is to create a new office let alone take in three associates at the same time. Yet that is just what Dr. Alan A. Winter has done. “Young dentists bring new skill sets and energies to a practice,” says Dr. Winter. “I needed to a create a periodontal practice that would cater to the special dental needs of the boomers because of the strong evidence linking untreated gum problems with systemic diseases and at the same time, bring in talented associates skilled in treating the cosmetic periodontal needs of today’s younger generation.”

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Smokeless Tobacco Use and Periodontal Disease NYC in a Rural Male Population http://worldclassid.com/profiles/blogs/uncategorized/smokeless-tobacco-use-and/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=smokeless-tobacco-use-and Wed, 17 Apr 2019 17:42:20 +0000 http://worldclassid.com/profiles/blogs/smokeless-tobacco-use-and/ A study investigating smokeless tobacco use found that people who chew tobacco or retain it in their mouths display greater gingival recession prevalence and extent Periodontal Disease NYC: Investigating the Effects of Smokeless Tobacco Use on Oral Health Despite the reported effects of smokeless tobacco (ST) on the periodontium (the soft tissues surrounding and supporting […]

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A study investigating smokeless tobacco use found that people who chew tobacco or retain it in their mouths display greater gingival recession prevalence and extent

Periodontal Disease NYC: Investigating the Effects of Smokeless Tobacco Use on Oral Health

Despite the reported effects of smokeless tobacco (ST) on the periodontium (the soft tissues surrounding and supporting the teeth), the incidence of periodontal disease NYC, and the high prevalence of ST use in rural populations and in men, studies on this specific topic are limited. With such a gap in the literature on this subject, it is the purpose of this cross-sectional investigation to evaluate the periodontal health status and incidence of periodontal disease NYC in male ST users from a rural population. However, before the methodology is explored, the term ‘smokeless tobacco’ needs elucidation. Smokeless tobacco, in the context of the United States and this research, generally refers to tobacco leaves that are placed between the lower or upper lip and the gums, or alternatively chewed.

Investigating Health and Periodontal Disease NYC and the Connection with Smokeless Tobacco Consumption: Methodology

The study sample of this periodontal disease NYC study consisted of 73 adult male residents of two rural Appalachian Ohio counties that were daily ST users and presented unilateral mandibular oral ST keratosis lesions. Keratosis legions generally take the form of a growth in the upper layer of soft tissue or gum. Subjects completed a questionnaire and received an oral examination in which the following variables were recorded:

  • Teeth present (the number of missing teeth, if any)
  • ST keratosis lesion,
  • Plaque and gingival index (the severity of accumulation)
  • Probing depth (PD) (to what extent the gingival can be separated from the tooth)
  • Recession depth (RD) (to what extent the gum has receded from the tooth, exposing the root), and
  • Attachment level

A Statistical analysis was conducted, which compared ST-site mandibular teeth (teeth adjacent to the subject's unilateral ST keratosis lesion) to NST-site teeth (contralateral corresponding teeth).

Investigation of Periodontal Disease NYC in ST Users: Results

Of the 73 ST users recruited for this analysis, the following results were obtained:

  • Recession prevalence is much greater in ST-site quadrants (36%) compared to NST-site quadrants (18%).
  • Twice as many teeth had recession on ST-site (approximately 20%) than NST-site (approximately 10%).
  • Average buccal (cheek-side) RD on ST-site teeth did not differ from that on the NST-site teeth. Although average buccal attachment loss is greater on ST-site teeth, the mean difference is <0.5 mm.
  • When stratified by years of ST use, subjects using ST for 10 to 18 years exhibit the most differences between ST and NST sites, whereas subjects using ST for <10 years show no differences.

From this analysis, the authors conclude that the results indicate that greater gingival recession prevalence and extent are associated with ST placement site in rural male ST users. The implications in terms of periodontal disease NYC remain to be investigated, but from these initial findings, it can be inferred that ST users are at a greater risk due to gum recession and tooth root exposure.
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