The reduction in alveolar bone dimensions is an inevitable outcome after tooth extraction due to the healing events that results in bone modeling/remodeling. Alveolar ridge preservation is a successful approach that aids in reducing these changes greatly. Various techniques have been employed to achieve that outcome utilizing bone grafts and/or membrane. Dentin graft is a promising type that can overcome many of the limitations facing mainstream grafts. Autogenous source serve the advantage of providing graft with no cross-infection risk or immunogenicity. Moreover, the unique structure of dentin makes it suitable for osteoinduction and osteoconduction that yields favorite bone regeneration outcomes. Demineralization of dentin is essential to release trapped growth factors, expose collagen fibrils and enhance the grafts degradability and replacement by native tissues. Many acids have been investigated for the use in chairside preparation of the dentin graft and hence, clinicians are faced with different choices but little evidence regarding the acid which yield s better outcomes.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
TRIPLE
Enrollment
8
atraumatic extraction followed by graft material insertion
Radiographic bone changes
width and height losses (quantitative in mm)
Time frame: 6 months
histological analysis
Histologic observations (qualitative) and histomorphometric measurements (quantitative in %)
Time frame: 6 months
soft tissue healing
rate of wound epitheliallization
Time frame: Biweekly for 6 weeks
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