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1.
Int Endod J ; 2024 May 17.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38758526

RESUMEN

AIM: To evaluate clinical and radiographic outcome of endodontic microsurgery in through-and-through periapical lesions at 1-year and 5-year follow-up with adjunct use of platelet-rich plasma (PRP). METHODOLOGY: Thirty-two patients with large through-and-through periapical lesions were randomized in platelet-rich plasma (PRP) group and control group. Two-dimensional (2D) healing was evaluated with Molven's criteria and three-dimensional (3D) healing with modified PENN 3D criteria. Healing at resection plane (R), apical area (A), buccal cortex (BC), palatal cortex (PC) and overall bone healing (B) was assessed using CBCT scans. The volume of lesion was measured using ITK-Snap software. The analysis included comparison of 1- to 5-year intragroup (Friedman test/McNemar test) and intergroup scoring (Chi-square/ Mann-Whitney test). Logistic regression analysis was performed to determine the effect of various factors on healing at 5 years. RESULTS: Out of 32 patients/59 teeth evaluated after 1-year of endodontic microsurgery, 24 patients/44 teeth reported at 5 - year follow-up. Healing assessment with modified PENN 3D criteria revealed improvement in overall success rate of 66.7% at 1 year to 83.3% at 5 years, with no deterioration in any healing category. PRP group exhibited significantly better 3D healing than control group; both at 1 year (84.6% vs. 45.5%) and 5 years (100% vs. 63.6%). A significantly higher number of completely healed teeth were observed in PRP group than the control group at 5 years with respect to R, BC and B parameters. A volume reduction of 88% (91.4% PRP, 84% control) was depicted at 1 year and 94% (97.1% PRP, 91.1% control) at 5 years. None of the recorded factors including age, gender, size of lesion, preoperative swelling and sinus, histology of lesion, use of PRP, tooth location, preoperative buccal bone had significant effect on 3D healing at 5 years. CONCLUSIONS: This 5-year study suggested improvement in 3D radiographic healing of large through-and-through periapical lesions from 1 to 5 years with no deterioration in any healing parameter in both control and PRP groups. The additional use of PRP led to significantly better healing in such lesions. RACB index using CBCT allows better estimation of healing at resected, apical and cortical plane over modified PENN 3D or Molven's criteria.

3.
J Endod ; 46(9): 1167-1184, 2020 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32553878

RESUMEN

INTRODUCTION: The purpose of this randomized controlled trial was to evaluate the role of platelet-rich plasma (PRP) in the healing of through-and-through periapical lesions using both 2-dimensional periapical radiographs and 3-dimensional (3D) cone-beam computed tomographic imaging. METHODS: Thirty-four patients after confirmation of a through-and-through periapical lesion were enrolled and randomly assigned to either the control or PRP group. Periapical surgery was performed, and grafting of the bone defect with PRP was done in the PRP group before suturing. Follow-up was scheduled at 12 months for clinical and radiographic analysis based on Molven's criteria; modified Penn 3D criteria; and resected plane, apical area, and cortical plate indexes. The absolute area and volume of the lesions were measured preoperatively and at follow-up using CorelDRAW X7 (64-bit) (Corel Corporation, Ottawa, Canada) and ITK Snap software (free software under the GNU General Public License developed by the National Institutes of Health, the US National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and BioEngineering, the US National Library of Medicine, the Universities of Pennsylvania and North Carolina, and an independent developer group), respectively. RESULTS: Thirty-two patients were available at follow-up. A success rate of 93.7% was observed for both the control and PRP groups on 2-dimensional evaluation, whereas the PRP group exhibited a significantly higher success rate (87.5%) than the control (50%) on 3D assessment. A significantly higher percentage reduction in the lesion volume was documented in the PRP group (92.30 ± 4.72) than the control group (83.04 ± 12.82). Resected plane, apical area, and cortical plate indexes revealed a significantly higher scoring at the resected plane and cortical plate parameter in the PRP group. Overall analysis documented the faster re-establishment of the palatal cortical plate than the buccal cortical plate in through-and-through lesions. CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest that PRP improves the healing outcome in through-and-through lesions. CBCT imaging provides better healing assessment after periapical surgery over periapical radiographs in such lesions.


Asunto(s)
Plasma Rico en Plaquetas , Canadá , Tomografía Computarizada de Haz Cónico , Humanos , North Carolina , Pennsylvania , Cicatrización de Heridas
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