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Post‐extraction mesio‐distal gap reduction assessment by confocal laser scanning microscopy – a clinical 3‐month follow‐up study
Author(s) -
GarcíaHerraiz Ariadna,
Silvestre Francisco Javier,
LeivaGarcía Rafael,
CrespoAbril Fortunato,
GarcíaAntón José
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of clinical periodontology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.456
H-Index - 151
eISSN - 1600-051X
pISSN - 0303-6979
DOI - 10.1111/jcpe.12706
Subject(s) - confocal laser scanning microscopy , laser scanning , dentistry , reduction (mathematics) , confocal , confocal microscopy , materials science , scanning electron microscope , medicine , biomedical engineering , laser , optics , composite material , mathematics , physics , geometry
Aim The aim of this 3‐month follow‐up study is to quantify the reduction in the mesio‐distal gap dimension ( MDGD ) that occurs after tooth extraction through image analysis of three‐dimensional images obtained with the confocal laser scanning microscopy ( CLSM ) technique. Materials and Methods Following tooth extraction, impressions of 79 patients 1 month and 72 patients 3 months after tooth extraction were obtained. Cast models were processed by CLSM , and MDGD changes between time points were measured. Results The mean mesio‐distal gap reduction 1 month after tooth extraction was 343.4 μ m and 3 months after tooth extraction was 672.3 μ m. The daily mean gap reduction rate during the first term (between baseline and 1 month post‐extraction measurements) was 10.3 μ m/day and during the second term (between 1 and 3 months) was 5.4 μ m/day. Conclusions The mesio‐distal gap reduction is higher during the first month following the extraction and continues in time, but to a lesser extent. When the inter‐dental contacts were absent, the mesio‐distal gap reduction is lower. When a molar tooth is extracted or the distal tooth to the edentulous space does not occlude with an antagonist, the mesio‐distal gap reduction is larger. The consideration of mesio‐distal gap dimension changes can help improve dental treatment planning.