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Gingivitis

Gingivitis is inflammation of the gingiva (gum tissue) without loss of the connective tissue attachment that anchors teeth. It is most commonly caused by the accumulation of dental plaque at the gum margin and is characterized by redness, swelling, and a tendency of the gums to bleed. Crucially, gingivitis is reversible: when plaque is removed, the inflammation resolves.

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Definition

Gingivitis is reversible inflammation of the gingival tissues, typically induced by dental plaque biofilm, occurring without loss of periodontal attachment or alveolar bone.

Scope

This entry covers plaque-induced gingivitis as the prototypical reversible periodontal condition - its definition, the experimental evidence linking it to plaque, its clinical signs, and its place in the periodontal disease classification. It is a reference and educational topic and does not provide treatment instructions.

Core questions

  • What clinical signs define gingivitis?
  • Why is gingivitis considered reversible whereas periodontitis is not?
  • How did the experimental gingivitis model establish plaque as the cause?
  • How is gingival health distinguished from gingivitis in the current classification?

Key concepts

  • Dental plaque biofilm
  • Gingival inflammation
  • Bleeding on probing
  • Reversibility
  • Absence of attachment loss
  • Experimental gingivitis model

Mechanisms

Gingivitis develops when microbial plaque accumulates undisturbed along the gingival margin, triggering a local host inflammatory response with vasodilation, increased crevicular fluid, and infiltration of inflammatory cells. The classic experimental gingivitis study (Löe et al., 1965) demonstrated the cause-and-effect link: when participants stopped oral hygiene, plaque accumulated and gingivitis developed within days, and reinstating plaque removal reversed it. Because the inflammation is confined to the soft tissue and does not destroy the periodontal ligament or bone, removing the plaque restores gingival health (Trombelli et al., 2018; Kinane et al., 2017).

Clinical relevance

Gingivitis is the most common form of periodontal disease and is the reversible stage that, in susceptible individuals, can precede periodontitis. Recognizing its signs - bleeding on probing, redness, and swelling - is central to periodontal assessment. This topic describes the condition for reference; it is not a guide to diagnosing or managing gingivitis in any individual.

Epidemiology

Plaque-induced gingivitis is highly prevalent in the general population across all age groups, reflecting its direct relationship to plaque accumulation and oral hygiene (Kinane et al., 2017).

Evidence & guidelines

The 2017 World Workshop consensus on periodontal health and gingival conditions (Chapple et al., 2018) and the accompanying case definition for plaque-induced gingivitis (Trombelli et al., 2018) provide the current diagnostic framework, distinguishing gingival health, gingivitis on an intact periodontium, and gingivitis on a reduced periodontium.

History

The causal role of plaque in gingivitis was established by Löe, Theilade, and Jensen's 1965 experimental gingivitis study, a landmark in periodontal research. Subsequent classifications formalized gingival diseases as a category, and the 2017 World Workshop refined case definitions to separate clinical gingival health from gingivitis and to account for gingivitis on a previously treated, reduced periodontium (Chapple et al., 2018; Trombelli et al., 2018).

Debates

How should bleeding on probing be used to define gingivitis?
The 2017 case definitions adopted bleeding-on-probing thresholds to operationalize gingivitis at the site and patient level, but the precise threshold and its interpretation on intact versus reduced periodontium remain matters of ongoing methodological refinement.

Key figures

  • Harald Löe
  • Iain Chapple
  • Leonardo Trombelli
  • Denis Kinane

Related topics

Seminal works

  • loe-1965
  • chapple-2018
  • trombelli-2018

Frequently asked questions

Is gingivitis reversible?
Yes. Gingivitis is inflammation limited to the gum tissue without attachment loss, and it resolves when the plaque biofilm that triggers it is removed.
Does gingivitis always become periodontitis?
No. Gingivitis precedes periodontitis in susceptible individuals, but not all gingivitis progresses; progression depends on host susceptibility and other risk factors.

Methods for this concept

Related concepts