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Socket Preservation Using a (Dense) PTFE Barrier with or without Xenograft Material: A Randomized Clinical Trial.

Marcio de Carvalho FormigaUlisses Ribeiro Campos DayubeCristiane Kern ChiapettiDaniela de Rossi FigueiredoJamil Awad Shibli
Published in: Materials (Basel, Switzerland) (2019)
When alveolar preservation procedures are not performed after tooth extraction, aesthetic and functional impairment could occur. Guided bone regeneration using polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) membranes has proven to be a simple alternative treatment that results in good maintenance of the alveolar bone for mediate/late implant placement. Therefore, this study compared the effect of alveolar preservation with the use of dense PTFE membranes, with and without xenograft material by Computerized tomography-based body composition (CTBC) analysis, after four months of the socket preservation procedure. A total of 29 teeth indicated for extraction. In the test group, the sockets were filled with bone graft biomaterial and subsequently coated with a dense PTFE membrane. In the control group, the sockets were filled with the blood clots and subsequently coated with a dense PTFE membrane. The results we found on the changes of the bone width and height after the procedures were: buccal plate: control group 0.46 mm, test group 0.91 mm; alveolar height: control group -0.41 mm, test group 0.35 mm; cervical third: control group -0.89 mm, test group -0.11 mm; middle third: control group -0.64, test group -0.50; and apical third: control group 0.09 mm, test group -0.14 mm. The use of a xenograft in conjunction with d-PTFE membranes proved to be superior to the use of the same membrane and blood clot only in regions of the crest, middle third, and alveolar height.
Keyphrases
  • body composition
  • body mass index
  • bone regeneration
  • physical activity
  • soft tissue
  • combination therapy