Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT06228534

Root Coverage With Tunneling Technique With Connective Tissue Versus Coronal Advancement Flap Technique.

Root Coverage With Tunneling Technique With Connective Tissue Versus Coronal Advancement Flap Technique. A 3- and 6-month Follow-up of a Randomized Clinical Trial.

Status
Completed
Phase
EARLY_Phase 1
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
20 (actual)
Sponsor
Luis Alberto Chauca Bajaña · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
20 Years – 50 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

This is a randomized triple-blind clinical trial. This comparative clinical study investigates the efficacy of root coverage using two periodontal techniques: the tunneling technique and the coronal advancement technique. The objective is to evaluate and compare the clinical, esthetic and patient perception outcomes after undergoing each procedure. Participants with specific gingival recessions will be included, and follow-up will be performed to measure root coverage, keratinized tissue gain and other relevant parameters. In addition, a detailed analysis of the morbidity associated with each technique will be performed. This study aims to provide valuable information to guide oral health professionals in choosing the most appropriate technique for the treatment of gingival recessions.

Detailed description

Donor area Surgeries were initiated in all participants by removing connective tissue from the mucosa of the palate using the deepithelialized free gingival graft technique. Receiving area \- TUN + CTG (test group) Zabalegui et al. detailed the surgical procedure as follows: The tunnel is created by making a partial-thickness incision in each recession area that will be addressed in the procedure. Special attention is paid to the manipulation of the tissue beyond the mucogingival junction, in order to obtain a tunnel without tension that facilitates the insertion of the graft. At the level of the interdental papillae, a careful incision is made, raising the papillae gently without separating their tips. A graft is extracted from the palate that extends from the canine area to the tuberosity, ensuring that it is long enough to cover the root of all the teeth involved. The graft is inserted into the tunnel using a specific suture technique. The first suture is passed through the most distal part of the recession, and the needle emerges in the most medial part of the recession. The second suture is placed on the opposite side, and the needle emerges in the same medial location of the recession. The graft, supported by both sutures (mesial and distal), slides smoothly into the tunnel, passing under the interdental papillae. In some cases, specific instruments can help adjust the graft within the tunnel. Once the graft is in the desired position, both sutures are tied with knots to secure and stabilize the inserted graft. This exposes grafting into the recession area. CAF + CTG (grupo control) Two beveled incisions were made in a horizontal position, one on the mesial side and one on the distal side of the recession-affected area. These incisions were located at the bases of the papillae and distanced 1 mm from the tip of the anatomical papillae, which made it possible to suture the gingival margin upwards towards the cementum-enamel junction. Subsequently, two slightly divergent oblique beveled incisions were made, starting at the ends of the two horizontal incisions and extending to the alveolar mucosa along 3-4 mm. The resulting flap had partial thickness in the surgical papilla area, full thickness from the gingival margin to 3-4 mm of bone exposure, and partial thickness beyond the mucogingival junction. The flap muscle insertions in the apical zone of bone exposure were eliminated to allow its passive upward movement in the coronal direction. The root surface was subjected to mechanical treatment with curettes, but only in the area where the clinical junction had been lost, in order to prevent possible damage to the connective tissue fibers that were still anchored in the root cementum. In addition, facial soft tissue deepithelialization was carried out in the anatomical papillae located coronally to the horizontal incisions. The closure of the flap was performed by a combination of band sutures, applied in the areas of the interdental papillae, and simple sutures, used in the areas of the vertical incisions. Special care was taken to position the soft tissue at the top, in the direction of the cementum-enamel junction, with the aim of counteracting physiological retraction during the healing process.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
PROCEDURERoot coverage with tunneling techniqueTHIS IS THE INTERVENTION GROUP THE RECIPIENT AREA OF THE CONNECTIVE GRAFT IS PREPARED.

Timeline

Start date
2024-01-15
Primary completion
2024-12-15
Completion
2025-06-20
First posted
2024-01-29
Last updated
2025-07-02

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Ecuador

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06228534. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.