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Rethinking the decision-making process to treat gingival recession associated with non-carious cervical lesions

Authors :
Mauro Pedrine SANTAMARIA
Ingrid Fernandes MATHIAS-SANTAMARIA
Laís Fernanda Ferreira FERRAZ
Renato Corrêa Viana CASARIN
Giuseppe Alexandre ROMITO
Enilson Antônio SALLUM
Giovan Paolo PINI-PRATO
Márcio Zaffalon CASATI
Source :
Brazilian Oral Research, Vol 35, Iss suppl 2 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Sociedade Brasileira de Pesquisa Odontológica, 2021.

Abstract

Abstract The presence of a tooth-surface defect, such as a non-carious cervical lesion (NCCL), associated with sites of gingival recession (GR) defects creates a combined soft tissue/tooth defect (CD) that requires a different treatment plan. This study aimed to critically review the literature regarding the available treatment protocols for CDs and suggest a new decision-making process. NCCLs were classified as Class A-: the cementoenamel junction (CEJ) was visible and the root surface discrepancy was < 0.5 mm (no step); Class A+: CEJ was visible and the root surface discrepancy was > 0.5 mm (with a step); Class B-: unidentifiable CEJ without a step; Class B+: unidentifiable CEJ with a step. NCCLs affecting both root and crown surfaces (Class B) lead to CEJ destruction and consequently eliminate an important landmark used before and after root coverage procedures. The depth of the root surface discrepancy is vital owing to its possible impact on soft tissue adaptation after healing, which, in turn, may influence the treatment options, namely the use of graft and/or composites to compensate for the discrepancy. Clinically, a step with horizontal depth greater than 0.5 mm should be recognized as the minimum threshold value to define this condition. Extremely deep defects tend to assume a V-shaped topography. Therefore, extremely deep V-shaped defects were classified into subclasses A+V, a V-shaped defect, and B+V, a V-shaped defect with loss of CEJ, for management considerations. The treatment options, supported by the literature, and a decision-making process to deal with each condition are presented.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
18073107
Volume :
35
Issue :
suppl 2
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Brazilian Oral Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.25fa91bc0cec4356b2abed343fd86cd3
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1590/1807-3107bor-2021.vol35.0096