ObjectivesThis study assessed the bone density gain and its relationship with the
periodontal clinical parameters in a case series of a regenerative therapy
procedure.Material and MethodsUsing a split-mouth study design, 10 pairs of infrabony defects from 15 patients
were treated with a pool of bovine bone morphogenetic proteins associated with
collagen membrane (test sites) or collagen membrane only (control sites). The
periodontal healing was clinically and radiographically monitored for six months.
Standardized presurgical and 6-month postoperative radiographs were digitized for
digital subtraction analysis, which showed relative bone density gain in both
groups of 0.034 ± 0.423 and 0.105 ± 0.423 in the test and control
group, respectively (p>0.05).ResultsAs regards the area size of bone density change, the influence of the therapy was
detected in 2.5 mm2 in the test group and 2 mm2 in the
control group (p>0.05). Additionally, no correlation was observed between the
favorable clinical results and the bone density gain measured by digital
subtraction radiography (p>0.05).ConclusionsThe findings of this study suggest that the clinical benefit of the regenerative
therapy observed did not come with significant bone density gains. Long-term
evaluation may lead to a different conclusions.