1. Treatment of Furcation Involvement Using Autogenous Tooth Graft With 1-Year Follow-Up: A Case Series.
- Author
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Upadhyay P, Blaggana V, Tripathi P, and Jindal M
- Subjects
- Adult, Autografts, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Periodontal Attachment Loss, Bone Regeneration, Furcation Defects, Guided Tissue Regeneration, Periodontal
- Abstract
Introduction: The objective of this study was to clinically evaluate an autogenous tooth graft (ATG) as a novel bone graft material in the treatment of Class II furcation defects. ATG is prepared at chairside from a freshly extracted tooth to be used immediately for bone regeneration. It has an advantage over the autogenous and other bone graft materials as it is non-immunogenic, inexpensive, easily available, and lacks donor-site morbidity., Case Presentation: This study was conducted on three middle-aged (35 to 55 years) male patients, who had at least one mandibular molar with Class II furcation involvement (a total of 5 sites) and one tooth that required extraction because of poor prognosis and was not endodontically treated. At 9 and 12 months, the mean reductions in horizontal probing depth were (1.40 ± 0.57 mm) and (1.52 ± 0.59 mm), respectively, and the mean gains in linear bone-fill were (3.90 ± 0.15 mm) and (5.33 ± 0.10 mm), respectively., Conclusions: Within the limitation of this study, ATG exhibited ideal properties for alveolar bone regeneration. In addition, this study outlines the chairside method to prepare a graft and highlights the improvement in clinical and radiographic parameters at 9 and 12 months., (© 2018 American Academy of Periodontology.)
- Published
- 2019
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