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Psychological Resilience, Perceived Stress and Periodontal Status Among Bruxers

30 de maio de 2026 atualizado por: Postgraduate Institute of Dental Sciences Rohtak

Psychological Resilience as a Modifier of the Relationship Between Perceived Stress and Periodontal Status Among Bruxers: a Cross-sectional Study

The present study aims to evaluate psychological resilience as a modifier of the relationship between perceived stress and periodontal status among bruxers. Given that both stress and inflammation share common neuroendocrine and immunological pathways, resilience may play a crucial role in buffering stress-induced periodontal breakdown. Understanding this relationship could shift periodontal management toward a biopsychosocial model, integrating psychological assessment and resilience enhancement with conventional non-surgical therapy. Such insights could help design personalized periodontal care strategies addressing both biological and psychological determinants of disease progression.

Visão geral do estudo

Status

Ainda não está recrutando

Intervenção / Tratamento

Descrição detalhada

Periodontitis has been defined by the 2018 World Workshop on the Classification of Periodontal and Peri-Implant Diseases and Conditions as "a chronic multifactorial inflammatory disease associated with dysbiotic plaque biofilms and characterized by progressive destruction of the tooth supporting apparatus". The disease represents one of the most prevalent chronic conditions globally and is a leading cause of tooth loss in adults. The pathogenesis involves a complex interplay between microbial challenge, host immune-inflammatory responses, and modifying environmental, systemic and psychosocial factors. Although bacterial biofilm is a necessary etiological factor, it is the host response that determines disease progression or stability. Among several modifying influences, psychosocial stress has gained increasing attention in periodontal research. Chronic stress leads to sustained activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis and the sympathetic-adrenal-medullary system, resulted in elevated cortisol and cathecholamine. These neuroendocrine mediators exert profound effects on immune regulation, enhancing pro-inflammatory cytokine production, impairing neutrophil function, and delaying wound healing. In the periodontium, such dysregulation may potentiate tissue breakdown by amplifying inflammatory cascades and reducing reparative capacity.

Several studies have demonstrated a positive association between perceived psychosocial stress and periodontal disease severity, including increased probing depth, attachment loss, and bleeding on probing. Furthermore, stress can indirectly influence oral health through behavioral pathways such as poor oral hygiene, smoking, bruxism, and altered diet. Despite this, not all individuals exposed to similar stress levels exhibit equivalent periodontal destruction, indicating the presence of psychological moderators that buffer or modify stress effects.

One such factor is psychological resilience, defined as "a measure of stress-coping ability and a personal quality that enables one to thrive in the face of adversity".It reflects an individual's ability to maintain or regain mental health and functional stability despite adversity. Resilience is shaped by cognitive, emotional, and social components that promote adaptive coping and self-regulation. High resilience has been linked to better immune regulation, lower inflammatory markers such as C-Reactive protein and Interleukin-6, and faster recover from stress induced physiological changes.

Moreover, behavioural factors such as stress related parafunctional activity bruxism, characterized by repetitive jaw-muscle activity involving clenching or grinding of teeth and/or bracing or thrusting of the mandible. The excessive and repetitive forces associated with bruxism may exert traumatic effects on tooth supporting structures and are considered an important cofactor in the progression of periodontal breakdown.

Emerging evidence in behavioral medicine suggests that resilience can moderate the relationship between perceived stress and health outcomes, attenuating the physiological and behavioral impacts of chronic stress. In dentistry, however, this construct remains underexplored. No study have assessed how resilience interacts with stress to influence periodontal status among bruxers. Given that both stress and inflammation share common neuroendocrine and immunological pathways, resilience may play a crucial role in buffering stress-induced periodontal breakdown in bruxers.

Understanding this relationship could shift periodontal management toward a biopsychological model, integrating psychological assessment and resilience enhancement with conventional non-surgical therapy. Therefore, the present study aims to evaluate psychological resilience as a modifier of the relationship between perceived stress and periodontal status among bruxers. Such insights could help designed personalized periodontal care strategies addressing both biological and psychological determinants of disease progression.

Tipo de estudo

Observacional

Inscrição (Estimado)

75

Contactos e Locais

Esta seção fornece os detalhes de contato para aqueles que conduzem o estudo e informações sobre onde este estudo está sendo realizado.

Contato de estudo

Estude backup de contato

  • Nome: Dr. Rajinder Kumar Sharma, MDS
  • Número de telefone: +91 9416358222
  • E-mail: rksharmamds@yahoo.in

Locais de estudo

    • Haryana
      • Rohtak, Haryana, Índia
        • Post Graduate Institute of dental sciences
        • Contato:

Critérios de participação

Os pesquisadores procuram pessoas que se encaixem em uma determinada descrição, chamada de critérios de elegibilidade. Alguns exemplos desses critérios são a condição geral de saúde de uma pessoa ou tratamentos anteriores.

Critérios de elegibilidade

Idades elegíveis para estudo

  • Adulto

Aceita Voluntários Saudáveis

Não

Método de amostragem

Amostra Não Probabilística

População do estudo

The study population will be drawn from patients reporting to the outpatient clinic of department of Periodontics at PGIDS, Rohtak on the basis of strict inclusion and exclusion criteria

Descrição

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Patients with age group 30-50 years diagnosed with generalized periodontitis.
  • Probable bruxers (as per BruxScreen questionnaire)
  • Presence of minimum 20 teeth excluding third molars
  • Able to read/understand Hindi or English (for questionnaires)

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Systemic diseases that may affect periodontal disease progression or outcome of treatment (diabetes, autoimmune diseases)
  • History of Periodontal treatment within last 6 months
  • History of Antibiotic use within the previous 3 months
  • History of Steroid, immunosuppressive and psychiatric drug use
  • Pregnant and lactating women
  • Smoking or substance abuse

Plano de estudo

Esta seção fornece detalhes do plano de estudo, incluindo como o estudo é projetado e o que o estudo está medindo.

Como o estudo é projetado?

Detalhes do projeto

Coortes e Intervenções

Grupo / Coorte
Intervenção / Tratamento
Probable Bruxers
Patients aged 30-50 years with probable bruxism based on self report and clinical examination using Bruxscreen questionnaire. Participants underwent assessment of perceived stress using the perceived stress scale, pyschological resilience using Connor-Davidson Resilience scale, and periodontal health status via pocket probing depth, clinical attachment level, bleeding on probing, gingival index and plaque index.
Psychological resilience and perceived stress was assessed using questionaires

O que o estudo está medindo?

Medidas de resultados primários

Medida de resultado
Descrição da medida
Prazo
Psychological Resilience
Prazo: Baseline
Participants will complete validated questionnaire using Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale (CD-RISC-10) to assess psychological resilience. 10 Items using 5-point Likert scale from 0 = not true at all to 4 = true nearly all the time. Minimum score:0, maximum score: 40. Higher score indicates greater psychological resilience.
Baseline
Perceives Stress Scale
Prazo: baseline
Perceived stress scale will be assessed using perceived stress scale-10 item version questionnaire. 10 items using 5 point Likert scale 0= never to 4= very often. Minimum score: 0, maximum score: 40. Higher score indicate greater perceived stress.
baseline

Colaboradores e Investigadores

É aqui que você encontrará pessoas e organizações envolvidas com este estudo.

Investigadores

  • Diretor de estudo: Dr. Rajinder Kumar Sharma, MDS, Post Graduate Institute of dental sciences

Datas de registro do estudo

Essas datas acompanham o progresso do registro do estudo e os envios de resumo dos resultados para ClinicalTrials.gov. Os registros do estudo e os resultados relatados são revisados ​​pela National Library of Medicine (NLM) para garantir que atendam aos padrões específicos de controle de qualidade antes de serem publicados no site público.

Datas Principais do Estudo

Início do estudo (Estimado)

21 de junho de 2026

Conclusão Primária (Estimado)

1 de dezembro de 2026

Conclusão do estudo (Estimado)

1 de dezembro de 2026

Datas de inscrição no estudo

Enviado pela primeira vez

22 de maio de 2026

Enviado pela primeira vez que atendeu aos critérios de CQ

22 de maio de 2026

Primeira postagem (Real)

29 de maio de 2026

Atualizações de registro de estudo

Última Atualização Postada (Real)

2 de junho de 2026

Última atualização enviada que atendeu aos critérios de controle de qualidade

30 de maio de 2026

Última verificação

1 de maio de 2026

Mais Informações

Termos relacionados a este estudo

Outros números de identificação do estudo

  • Gaytri Perio2

Plano para dados de participantes individuais (IPD)

Planeja compartilhar dados de participantes individuais (IPD)?

NÃO

Informações sobre medicamentos e dispositivos, documentos de estudo

Estuda um medicamento regulamentado pela FDA dos EUA

Não

Estuda um produto de dispositivo regulamentado pela FDA dos EUA

Não

Essas informações foram obtidas diretamente do site clinicaltrials.gov sem nenhuma alteração. Se você tiver alguma solicitação para alterar, remover ou atualizar os detalhes do seu estudo, entre em contato com register@clinicaltrials.gov. Assim que uma alteração for implementada em clinicaltrials.gov, ela também será atualizada automaticamente em nosso site .

Ensaios clínicos em Resilience assessment

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