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Prepared by Dr.Nurhuda Abdul Alim Araby BDS ( UiTM )

Regenerative Periodontal Therapy

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Page 1: Regenerative Periodontal Therapy

Prepared byDr.Nurhuda Abdul Alim Araby

BDS (UiTM)

Page 2: Regenerative Periodontal Therapy

Introduction

Definition

Regenerative Concepts

Guided Tissue Regeneration

Assessment of Periodontal Regeneration

Conclusion

References

Page 3: Regenerative Periodontal Therapy

overview of wound healing

following periodontal

surgical procedures

to discuss the basic

principles of periodontal

regeneration

to illustrate the factors

that influence

this process.

Page 4: Regenerative Periodontal Therapy
Page 5: Regenerative Periodontal Therapy

• Important goal of periodontal therapy is to obtain a reduced pocket depth after treatment in order to prevent further disease progression

• Can be accomplished by non-surgical therapy in patients with moderate periodontitis, whereas in severe cases - presence of intrabony defects and furcations, the treatment must be supplemented with periodontal surgery.

Page 6: Regenerative Periodontal Therapy

• Fundamental objective of periodontal surgery is to provide access for proper instrumentation and cleaning of the root surface

• Most surgical procedures result in the elimination or the reduction of the soft tissue component of the periodontal pocket.

• Periodontal treatment, both surgical and nonsurgical, results in recession of the gingival margin after healing (Isidor et al. 1984)

Page 7: Regenerative Periodontal Therapy

• Localized gingival recession and root exposure may represent an esthetic problem to the patient, and it is often associated with root sensitivity.

• Such a situation is an indication to apply regenerative periodontal therapy to obtain root coverage in order to improve esthetics and reduce root sensitivity.

Page 8: Regenerative Periodontal Therapy

• Successful root coverage implies regeneration of the attachment apparatus on the exposed root surface including cementum with inserting collagen fibers, as well as an esthetically acceptable restoration of the anatomy of the mucogingival complex.

Page 9: Regenerative Periodontal Therapy

• Another indication for RPT is furcation-involved teeth. The furcation area is often inaccessible to adequate instrumentation and frequently the roots present concavities and furrows which make proper cleaning of the area after resectivesurgery impossible.

• Long-term prognosis of furcation-involved teeth can be improved considerably by successful regenerative periodontal therapy.

Page 10: Regenerative Periodontal Therapy
Page 11: Regenerative Periodontal Therapy

• Regeneration - reproduction / reconstruction of a lost or injured part in such a way that the architecture and function of the lost or injured tissues are completely restored (Glossary of Periodontal Terms, 1992).

• A.k.a “reattachment” or “new attachment”.

Page 12: Regenerative Periodontal Therapy

• = The attachment of the tooth has been regenerated when new cementum with inserting collagen fibers has formed on the detached root surface

• While regeneration of the periodontium also includes re-growth of the alveolar bone.

Page 13: Regenerative Periodontal Therapy

• “reattachment” = regeneration of a fibrous attachment to a root surface surgically or mechanically deprived of its periodontal ligament tissue.

• “new attachment” = fibrous attachment was restored on a root surface deprived of its connective tissue attachment due to the progression of periodontitis.

Page 14: Regenerative Periodontal Therapy
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• Regeneration of the periodontium must include the formation of new cementum with inserting collagen fibers on the previously periodontitis-involved root surfaces and the regrowth of the alveolar bone.

• Melcher(1976) suggested - the type of cell which repopulates the root surface after periodontal surgery determines the nature of the attachment that will form.

Page 16: Regenerative Periodontal Therapy

Epithelial cells

Cells derived from the gingival connective tissue

Cells derived from the bone

Cells derived from the periodontal ligament

Page 17: Regenerative Periodontal Therapy
Page 18: Regenerative Periodontal Therapy

• An investigation was carried out in dogs in order to examine the relationship between the re-establishment of a connective tissue attachment to the root surface and the regrowthof alveolar bone (Nyman & Karring 1979).

• During this procedure, care was taken to minimize the mechanical injury to the connective tissue attachment on the root surface.

Page 19: Regenerative Periodontal Therapy

• After 8 months of healing, histologic analysis demonstrated that although a connective tissue attachment was re-established consistently on the roots, the amount of bone regeneration varied widely.

• These results demonstrated that the amount of bone regrowth is unrelated to the re-establishment of a connective tissue attachment.

Page 20: Regenerative Periodontal Therapy

• Experiment was carried out in monkeys (Lindhe et al. 1984), to examine whether the presence of bone may stimulate the formation of a new connective tissue attachment.

• Healing occurred irrespective of the presence or absence of bone - establishment of a connective tissue attachment is unrelated to the presence of alveolar bone.

Page 21: Regenerative Periodontal Therapy

• The use of bone grafts in RPT is based on the assumption that the promotion of bone regrowth may also induce cells in the bone to produce a new cementum layer with inserting collagen fibers on previously periodontitisinvolved root surfaces.

• Histologic studies in both humans and animals have demonstrated that it often result in healing with a long junctional epithelium rather than a new connective tissue attachment (Caton & Zander

1976; Listgarten & Rosenberg 1979; Moscow et al. 1979).

Page 22: Regenerative Periodontal Therapy

Kornman & Robertson (2000)

Bacterial contamination

Innate wound - healing potential

Local site characteristics

Surgical procedure /

technique

Page 23: Regenerative Periodontal Therapy

• The morphology of the periodontal bony defect - essential for the establishment of a predictable prognosis

• Goldman and Cohen (1958) introduced a classification of periodontal intrabony defects which was based on the number of osseous walls surrounding the defect, being either three-wall,two-wall or one-wall defects or a combination of such situations

Page 24: Regenerative Periodontal Therapy
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• Results from a study by Ellegaard and Löe (1971)

comprising 191 defects in 24 patients with periodontal disease indicated that complete regeneration, determined radiographically and by periodontal probing, had occurred in around 70% of the three-wall defects, in 40% of the combined two-wall and three-wall defects, and in 45% of the two-wall defects.

Page 28: Regenerative Periodontal Therapy

TYPE OF

GRAFTS

Autogenousgrafts

Allogeneicgrafts

Xenogeneicgrafts

Alloplasticmaterials

Page 29: Regenerative Periodontal Therapy

• Grafts transferred from one position to another within the same individual.

• No potential problems of histocompatibility and disease transmission

• Comprises (i) cortical bone or (ii) cancellousbone and marrow

• Promote bone healing• Mainly through osteogenesis and/or

osteoconduction.• Harvested either from intraoral or extraoral

donor sites.• Intaroral :edentulous areas of the jaw, healing

extraction sites, maxillary tuberosities or the mandibular retromolar area

• Extraoral : iliac crest marrow

Au

tog

en

ou

sg

raft

s

Page 30: Regenerative Periodontal Therapy

• Grafts transferred between genetically dissimilar members of the same species.

• Frozen iliac cancellous bone and marrow, mineralized freeze dried bone allogeneic grafts (FDBA), and decalcified freeze-dried alogeneicbone grafts (DFDBA).

• The need for cross matching to decrease the likelihood of graft rejection as well as the risk of disease transmission virtually eliminated the use of frozen iliac allogeneic grafts in periodontics.A

llo

ge

ne

icg

raft

s

Page 31: Regenerative Periodontal Therapy

• Grafts taken from a donor of another species.• Nielsen et al. (1981) treated 46 intrabony

defects with Kielbone® (i.e. defatted and deproteinized ox bone) and another 46 defects with intraoral autogenous bone grafts. The results showed no difference between the amount of clinical gain of attachment and bone fill obtained in the two categories of defect.

• Bio-Oss®, Geistlich AG, Switzerland;• Lubboc®/Laddec®, Ost Development

SA,France; • Endobone®, Biomet Inc. Dordrecht, The

Netherlands;• OsteoGraf®/N, DENTSPLY, Friadent Cera-Med,

Lakewood, CO, USA; • Cerabone®, aap Implantate AG,Berlin,Germany.

Xe

no

ge

ne

icg

raft

s

Page 32: Regenerative Periodontal Therapy

• Synthetic, biocompatible, inorganic implant materials which synthetic, which are used as substitutes for bone grafts.

• Promote bone healing through osteoconduction.• 1. Hydroxyapatite (HA) - non-resorbable ceramic

/ resorbable non-ceramic• 2. Betatricalcium phosphate (β-TCP), • 3. Polymers - a non-resorbable, calcium

hydroxide coated co-polymer of polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) and polyhydroxylethylmethacrylate (PHEMA)

• 4. Bioactive glasses (bio-glasses) - composed of SiO2, Na2O, P2O5 and are resorbable or not resorbable

All

op

last

icm

ate

ria

ls

Page 33: Regenerative Periodontal Therapy

Ellegaard et al. (1973, 1974, 1975, 1976) and Nielsen et al. (1980)

Osteoprolifertive(osteogenetic)

new bone is formed by bone-forming

cells contained in the grafted material

Osteoconductivethe grafted material

does not contribute to new bone formation per se but serves as

scaffold for bone formation originating

from adjacent host bone

Osteoinductivebone formation is

induced in the surrounding soft

tissue immediately adjacent to the

grafted material.

Page 34: Regenerative Periodontal Therapy
Page 35: Regenerative Periodontal Therapy

• GTR is achieved by placing barrier membranes over periodontal defects to exclude gingival epithelium and connective tissues, and to create a space into which proliferating cells from the periodontal ligament and bone can migrate.

• Nyman et al. (1982) reported new cementumwith inserting collagen fibers had formed on the previously exposed root surface.

Page 36: Regenerative Periodontal Therapy

• Key aspects of GTR : exclusion of epithelium, preservation of space under the membrane into which cells can migrate and formation of a stable blood clot under the membrane.

• Non-resorbable (e.g. expanded polytetrafluoroethylene, ePTFE) – require removal 4–6 weeks after placement.

Page 37: Regenerative Periodontal Therapy

• Resorbable (e.g. polylactic acid membranes, collagen membranes) - biodegrade within the tissues over 1–2 months and do not require a second surgical procedure for removal.

• May also be placed over implants and in conjunction with bone grafts in an attempt to increase the quantity of available bone.

• GTR produces most predictable results in class II furcations and in two- and three-walled osseous defects.

Page 38: Regenerative Periodontal Therapy
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• The clinical outcomes of GTR - frequently evaluated by changes in clinical attachment levels , bone levels, PPD and the position of the gingival margin.

• In some studies on grade II and III furcations, horizontal changes in clinical attachment, bone level, and pocket depth were also measured.

• However, evidence of true regeneration of periodontal attachment can only be provided by histologic means.

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Page 41: Regenerative Periodontal Therapy
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• Successful regeneration is assessed by periodontal probing, radiographic analysis, direct measurements of new bone, and histology.

• Although histology remains the ultimativestandard in assessing true periodontal regeneration, periodontal probing, direct bone measurements, and radiographic measurements of osseous changes are used in the majority of studies of regenerative therapy (Reddy & Jeffcoat 1999).

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Page 44: Regenerative Periodontal Therapy

As periodontal-regenerative procedures are time consuming and financially

demanding, clinicians need to learn really understand factors that may influence the

clinical outcome following periodontal reconstructive surgery in order to provide

the best possible service to patients

Page 45: Regenerative Periodontal Therapy
Page 46: Regenerative Periodontal Therapy

• Jan Lindhe, Niklaus P. Lang,Thorkild Karring. Clinical Periodontology and Implant Dentistry. Blackwell Munksgaard.Fifth edition (2008).

• Giuseppe polimeni, andreas v. Xiropaidis & ulf m. E. Wikesjo. Biology and principles of periodontal wound healing/regeneration. Periodontology2000. Vol. 41, June 2006, 30–47.

• Peter Heasman. Master Dentistry : Restorative Dentistry, Paediatric Dentistry and Orthodontics. Elsevier. Second Edition (2008) Vol 2,5-45.

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