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Joerg Meyle

Researcher at University of Giessen

Publications -  98
Citations -  6998

Joerg Meyle is an academic researcher from University of Giessen. The author has contributed to research in topics: Periodontitis & Porphyromonas gingivalis. The author has an hindex of 39, co-authored 89 publications receiving 5835 citations. Previous affiliations of Joerg Meyle include University of Tübingen & University of Würzburg.

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Peri-implant diseases: Consensus Report of the Sixth European Workshop on Periodontology

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discussed the most common peri-implant lesions caused by bacteria and concluded that the treatment of periimplant disease must include anti-infective measures.

Peri-implant diseases: Consensus Report of the Sixth European Workshop on Periodontology

TL;DR: It was concluded that the treatment of peri-implant disease must include anti-infective measures and it appeared that non-surgical mechanical therapy caused the reduction in inflammation but also that the adjunctive use of antimicrobial mouthrinses had a positive effect.
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Periodontal health and gingival diseases and conditions on an intact and a reduced periodontium: Consensus report of workgroup 1 of the 2017 World Workshop on the Classification of Periodontal and Peri‐Implant Diseases and Conditions

TL;DR: While gingival health and gingivitis have many clinical features, case definitions are primarily predicated on presence or absence of bleeding on probing, which creates differences in the way in which a "case" of gedival health or gingIVitis is defined for clinical practice as opposed to epidemiologically in population prevalence surveys.
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Molecular aspects of the pathogenesis of periodontitis

TL;DR: This volume of Periodontology 2000 tries to draw these complex new learnings into a contemporary model of disease pathogenesis, in which inflammation and dysbiosis impact upon whether the outcome is driven toward acute resolution and stability, chronic resolution and repair, or failed resolution and ongoing periodontal tissue destruction.