The Use of Photobiomodulation in the Treatment of Oral Complaints of Long COVID-19.A Randomized...
XerostomiaCOVID-192 moreCoronavirus (COVID-19) is a newly emerging zoonotic agent that emerged in December 2019 in China (2019-nCoV) as a Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV -2). Long COVID-19, or Post-Covid Syndrome or Long-term COVID-19, is a post-viral syndrome that persists after the acute infection has resolved. The most frequent symptoms of Lonf-term COVID are fatigue and dyspnea. But two classes of symptoms have been received scientific attention: the musculoskeletal pain and oral complaints related to Long COVID, mainly xerostomia and burning mouth. Photobiomodulation (PBM) therapy is often used for oral diseases and presents itself as a non-invasive, low-cost, safe therapy that has benefits in relation to the quality of life of patients with xerostomia. This study aims to investigate the clinical effectiveness of the use of a Photobiomodulation protocol in the treatment xerostomia and oral complaints related to Long-Covid. This will be a single-center, randomized, controlled, blinded clinical trial that will involve patients with Long COVID in follow-up at the Medical and Multiprofessional outpatient clinic of University Nove de Julho (UNINOVE) which remained hospitalized with COVID-19 at Lydia Storópoli Universitarian Hospital during the year 2022 and who were discharged from the inpatient treatment from January to December 2022. All those patients presenting xerostomia, burning mouth or oral complaints related to Long Covid will be randomized into 2 groups: PBM Group (standard rehabilitation treatment for Long COVID and xerostomia + PBM therapy) or PBM placebo group (standard rehabilitation treatment for Long COVID and xerostomia + placebo PBM therapy). PBM consists of the application of Red LED on the 3 pairs of major salivary glands (parotid, submandibular and sublingual) extraorally, transcutaneously, 3 J/cm2, for 36 seconds, twice a week for 06 weeks. Functional and quality of life evaluations will be perform pre and post therapy period.
MRI - Guided Adaptive RadioTHerapy for Reducing XerostomiA in Head and Neck Cancer (MARTHA-trial)...
Head and Neck CancerXerostomia Due to RadiotherapyRadiotherapy is the main treatment for locally advanced squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck (SCCHN). Many advances regarding tumor control and patient survival have been made over the past decades. However, treatment-induced toxicity remains a crucial problem, leading to reduced quality of life and permanent impairment for many survivors. Xerostomia is up to this day the leading cause of late toxicity for these patients. Toxicity has been reduced by implementation of modern image guided radiotherapy (IGRT) and intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT), but the low soft-tissue contrast of routine x-ray image guidance does not allow exact planning adaptation and daily imaging is associated with high radiation exposure. Furthermore, despite the routinely use of IMRT, rates of clinically relevant xerostomia (i.e. grade 2 or worse) are still common and reported in approximately 38%. Recently developed hybrid machines (MRidian®-CE approval since 2016), consisting of a linear accelerator and an integrated low-field MRI, could allow a) better visualization of tumor and organs at risk, such as parotid glands during patient positioning and daily treatment, b) daily imaging without additional radiation exposure, c) narrowest established safety margins for the treatment volumes, and finally d) repetitive adaptation of target volumes according to changes in patient weight and tumor anatomy during the radiotherapy course. These procedures would facilitate a high-precision treatment and help reduce dose exposure of critical structures.
A Mouth Education Program for Dry Mouth
XerostomiaEnd of Life2 moreThe goal of this cluster based intervention trial is to evaluate the effect of a nurse-led patient education program on dry mouth in patients with a life-limiting condition or frailty. The Mouth Educational Program (MEP) is a nurse-led patient education program, in which trained nurses use current clinical, palliative dry mouth guidelines in a structured manner to discuss causes, consequences and interventions with the patients and to create an appropriate treatment plan. This intervention will be compared to a control group receiving care as usual. Therefore, the main question it aims to answer is: Does a nurse-led patient education program reduce dry mouth complaints in patients with a life-limiting condition or frailty? Participants will be asked to answer questionnaires and, when part of the intervention group, partake in the Mouth Educational Program (MEP).
A Study of AAV2-hAQP1 Gene Therapy in Participants With Radiation-Induced Late Xerostomia
Grade 2 and 3 Late Xerostomia Caused by Radiotherapy for Cancers of the Upper Aerodigestive TractExcluding the Parotid GlandsThis study will assess the efficacy and safety of bilateral intra-parotid administration of AAV2-hAQP1 in adults with Grade 2 or Grade 3 radiation-induced late xerostomia.
Photobiomodulation on the Salivary Glands of Patients With Xerostomia Induced by the Use of Benzodiazepines...
XerostomiaDepression is the most common mental illness and antidepressants are in the first line of treatment of depressed patients. This therapeutic class is inevitably associated with side effects and adverse reactions, xerostomia being a symptom that seems to be transverse to them all. Saliva performs multiple functions and plays a vital role in protecting the health of the soft and hard tissues of the oral cavity. Reductions in salivary flow are most often manifested as dry mouth, and this is the subjective complaint called xerostomia. Although xerostomia is the most frequent indication of reduced salivary production, it is not invariably associated with hyposalivation. The user of antidepressant drugs has a number of important systemic and oral complications. Treatment for salivary changes remains unknown, but low-level laser therapy has been shown to be effective in improving salivary flow in patients with xerostomia due to diabetes, Sjogren's syndrome, chemotherapy and radiotherapy for head, neck and lung cancer. This randomized controlled trial aims to evaluate oral symptoms related to salivary gland function and mucosal condition of depressed patients, as well as the effects of photobiomodulation on salivary flow. Sixty patients will be included in the protocol, after signing the Informed Consent Form. They will undergo anamnesis, physical evaluation and oral health self-perception questionnaires and symptoms related to salivary gland function and then will be divided into two groups: Photobiomodulation (PBM) (n=30); will have their larger salivary glands irradiated with Diode laser (808nm, 4J per point, 40s) and placebo (PCB) (n=30), which will be subjected to a simulation, where the application protocol will be repeated, but with the laser off. Previous and post treatment sialometries will be performed to compare saliva volume. Biochemical analysis, in which total protein and calcium will be measured, will also be performed.
Interest of the Sialendoscopy Associated With a Local Injection of Corticosteroids in the Treatment...
XerostomiaXerostomia is defined as the subjective sensation of dry mouth, and may be associated with a reduction in saliva secretion and composition. It is one of the most common complaints found in patients after irradiation in the head and neck area. This complaint is found in a large majority of patients during radiotherapy, continuing for several years after stopping radiotherapy (93% during radiotherapy and 40 to 60% after two years post-radiotherapy). The advent of IMRT (Intensity-Modulated Radiation Therapy) has reduced this complaint, but it still concerns 40% of patients undergoing post-radiotherapy affecting the head and neck. Xerostomia is responsible for pronunciation difficulties, dysphagia, dysgeusia, alteration of the oral condition leading to a significant alteration of the quality of life. This complaint is maximal in the first six months following radiotherapy, then stabilizes or even regresses in the year following radiotherapy but can persist well beyond the end of the irradiation. At present, there are few treatments that have been shown to be truly effective. Systemic treatments (sialogues, cholinergic agonists, parasympathomimetic and muscarinic agonists, corticosteroids, etc.) allow partial improvement with delayed and not prolonged effectiveness. Many studies evaluating the efficacy of these therapies have shown contradictory and insufficient results (less than half of the patients present an improvement under treatment), without ever allowing a complete cure. Surgical treatments by submaxillary gland transfer have also been studied, but at the price of significant morbidity (cervicotomy, risk to the chin nerve in post-radial areas, etc.). Conformational radiotherapy with intensity modulation has made it possible to reduce the severity of xerostomia but does not make it possible to free oneself from this complication. Patients often find themselves reduced to symptomatic adjunctive treatments (gland massage, sprays, hydration, acupuncture...) without curative treatment. There is therefore a real need to respond to the complaint expressed by many patients by proposing an effective and long-lasting therapy.
Photobiomodulation Therapy Plus M-health in Head and Neck Cancer Patients: LAXER Study
Head and Neck CancerHead and Neck Neoplasms1 moreThe Photobiomodulation therapy could have positive effects on quality of life and oral health in head and neck cancer survivors post-radiotherapy. The improvement in quality of life will be maintained after a follow-up period.
Interest of Auriculotherapy in the Treatment of Xerostomia
XerostomiaThe aim of the study is to show that auriculotherapy is effective in the treatment of xerostomia
Sphenopalatine Ganglion Stimulation for Ocular and Oral Dryness
Dry Eye DiseaseXerostomiaDry Eye Disease (DED) is a multifactorial pathology characterized by inflammation of the lacrimal functional unit that develops in ocular surface pathology, severely affecting patients quality of life. The core of the treatment relies at present in antinflammatory topical therapies, which are still scarce. The investigators hypothesize that osteopathy-based techniques may help these patients by influencing the central involvement regarding parasympathetic innervation of tear and saliva-secreting glands. The aim of this osteopathic treatment protocol is to release the involved structures in the tear-secreting system innervation, such as the sphenopalatine ganglion. In addition, this ganglion innervates the minor salivary glands, therefore it is intended to help patients suffering from xerostomia. The hypothesis then is that a systemic protocol treatment can help balance both parts of the vegetative nervous system (sympathetic and parasympathetic) with the objective of increasing the secretion of tear and saliva in patients with ocular and oral dryness (DED and xerostomia, respectively), thus improving their clinical situation. This osteopathic protocol does not have the potential to cause adverse effects. The main objective is to analyze the efficacy of this protocol application in terms of improving symptoms and signs of ocular and oral dryness, tear film quality and inflammation molecule levels in tears and saliva.
Study Transplanting Bone Marrow Cells Into Salivary Glands to Treat Dry Mouth Caused by Radiation...
Head and Neck CancerXerostomiaThe goal of this clinical research study is to evaluate the safety and tolerability of injecting certain cells that you produce in your bone marrow called mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) into your salivary glands. Participants will have head and neck cancer that was treated with radiation therapy, and in this study will: Undergo a collection of bone marrow using a needle; Donate saliva; Undergo a salivary gland ultrasound; and, Complete questionnaires that ask about dry mouth Participants can expect to be in this study for up to 30 months.