“…Most of the available RCTs and controlled studies comparing L‐PRF to unassisted socket healing reported a benefit when L‐PRF was applied in terms of early (up to 8 weeks) (Alzahrani, Murriky & Shafik, ; Hauser, Gaydarov, Badoud, Vazquez & Bernard, ) and late (up to 16 weeks) (Temmerman, Vandessel, Castro, Jacobs & Teughels, ; Varghese, Manuel & Kumar, ) radiographic bone fill and horizontal/vertical alveolar preservation (Appendix S3), faster soft tissue healing, reduced pain and reduced post‐extraction sequelae (Marenzi, Riccitiello, Tia, Lauro & Sammartino, ; Ozgul, Senses, Er, Tekin & Tuz, ; Singh, Kohli & Gupta, ; Suttapreyasri & Leepong, ; Temmerman et al., ; Varghese et al., ; Zhang, Ruan, Shen, Tan & Huang, ). Moreover, the use of L‐PRF in third molars’ extractions has been associated with an improvement in second molars’ periodontal parameters (Kumar, Prasad, Ramanujam, Dexith & Chauhan, ) and a nearly tenfold decrease in the incidence of osteomyelitis compared to natural healing (Hoaglin & Lines, ). However, other RCTs and controlled studies did not confirm significant advantages when comparing L‐PRF to unassisted socket healing in terms of alveolar bone resorption and bone density (Girish Rao, Bhat, Nagesh, Rao & Mirle, ; Srinivas, Das, Rana, Qureshi & Vaidya, ; Zhang et al., ), periodontal parameters (Baslarli, Tumer, Ugur & Vatankulu, ), bone scintigraphy outcomes (Baslarli et al., ; Gurbuzer, Pikdoken, Urhan, Suer & Narin, ), post‐operative morbidities, prevention of dry socket and soft tissue closure (Asmael, Jamil & Hasan, ; Asutay, Yolcu, Gecor, Acar & Ozturk, ; Yerke, Jamjoom, Zahid & Cohen, ).…”