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Six‐year clinical evaluation of HTR Synthetic Bone grafts in human Grade II molar furcations
Author(s) -
Yukna Raymond A.,
Yukna Charlotte N.
Publication year - 1997
Publication title -
journal of periodontal research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.31
H-Index - 83
eISSN - 1600-0765
pISSN - 0022-3484
DOI - 10.1111/j.1600-0765.1997.tb00572.x
Subject(s) - molar , dentistry , furcation defect , medicine , debridement (dental) , maxilla , mandible (arthropod mouthpart) , botany , biology , genus
A biocompatible microporous composite of PMMA (poly‐methyl‐ methacrylare), PHEMA (poly‐hydroxy‐ethyl‐methacrylate) and calcium hydroxide bone replacement graft material (Bioplant HTR ® Synthetic Bone) was evaluated in 16 maxillary molar and 10 mandibular molar Grade II furcations in 13 patients. Following initial preparation, full thickness flaps were raised to gain access to the furcations; mechanical hand and ultrasonic root and defect debridement and chemical tetracycline root preparation were performed; furcation and adjacent osscous defects in each patient were grafted with HTR Synthetic Bone; and the host flaps replaced or slightly coronally positioned. Weekly, then monthly deplaquing was performed until surgical re‐entry at 6–12 months. Patients were then followed on approximate 3‐month recalls for ≤6 yr. Evaluation of the primary clinical outcome of furcation grade change showed that in the maxilla 5/16 furcations were clinically closed, 9/16 were Grade I, and 2/16 remained Grade II; while in the mandible 3/10 were clinically closed, 5/10 were Grade I, and 2/10 remained Grade II. Other significant clinical changes included decrease in mean horizontal furcation probing attachment level from 4.4 mm at surgery to 2.2 mm at re‐entry to 2.0 mm at 6 yr, decrease in probing pocket depth from 5.4 mm at surgery to 3.0 mm at re‐entry to 3.2 mm at 6 yr, and improvement in vertical clinical probing attachment level from 5.4 mm at surgery to 4.2 mm at re‐entry to 4.1 mm at 6 yr (all p>0.05 from surgery to re‐entry and surgery to 6 yr, n.s. from re‐entry to 6 yr via ANOVA). These favorable results with HTR polymer are suggest to several reports with other graft materials and with GTR barriers, and suggest that HTR polymer may have a beneficial effect in the clinical management of Grade II molar furcations.

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