These data suggest that there is a significant tissue rebound following crown-lengthening surgery that has not fully stabilized by 6 months. The amount of tissue rebound seems related to the position of the flap relative to the alveolar crest at suturing. These findings support the premise that clinicians should establish proper crown height during surgery without overreliance on flap placement at the osseous crest.
The purpose of this study was to compare the bovine derived xenograft (BDX) Bio-Oss to demineralized freeze dried bone allograft (DFDBA) in human intrabony defects. 17 healthy patients with no systemic disease with moderate-severe periodontitis (7 males, 10 females; aged 34-67), were treated. Surgically, defects were included only if the intraosseous defect depth was >3.0 mm. Final selection included 30 defects. The sites were randomly assigned treatment with DFDBA or BDX. Soft tissue and osseous defect measurements were taken the day of surgery and 6 months post-operatively at re-entry. Average baseline PD, CAL, and surgical defect depth for the DFDBA group were not statistically different from the BDX group. No adverse healing response occurred. The results showed a statistically significant improvement in PD and AL for both materials at 6 months in 26 defects (4 defects did not respond to therapy). Soft tissue measurements for the DFDBA group included PD reduction of 2.0+/-1.3 mm, and AL gain of 2.6+/-1.6 mm, while the BDX group showed a PD reduction of 3.0+/-1.7 mm, and AL gain of 3.6+/-1.8 mm. Osseous measurements showed bone fill of 2.4 mm (46.8%) for the DFDBA group and 3.0 mm (55.8%) for the BDX group. Defect resolution was 59.4% for the DFDBA group and 77.6% for the BDX group. Statistical analysis revealed there was no statistical difference between the 2 materials in all measurements.
The results of this study confirm previous research demonstrating a low rate of postoperative infection following periodontal surgical procedures. Although perioperative antibiotics are commonly used when performing certain regenerative and implant surgical procedures, data from this and other studies suggest that there may be no benefit in using antibiotics for the sole purpose of preventing post-surgical infections. Further large-scale, controlled clinical studies are warranted to determine the role of perioperative antibiotics in the prevention of periodontal post-surgical infections.
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