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Treatment of Gingival Recession Using Gingival Composite Restoration Versus Coronally Advanced Flap

Treatment of Gingival Recession Using Gingival Composite Restoration Versus Coronally Advanced Flap: Controlled Clinical Trial

Status
UNKNOWN
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT04584931
Enrollment
20
Registered
2020-10-14
Start date
2021-10-01
Completion date
2022-12-30
Last updated
2020-10-14

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Gingival Recession

Brief summary

Treatment of gingival recession requires favourable anatomical conditions and the use of invasive surgical approaches. Hence, these procedures are not always indicated in all cases and can cause great pain and morbidity. Coloured composite restorations that mimic the lost gingival tissues can provide a non-invasive and simple solution regardless of the recession soft and hard-tissue conditions.

Detailed description

Gingival recession (also known as marginal tissue recession) is defined as the downward displacement of the soft tissues around teeth that would have been otherwise covering the cemento-enamel junction (CEJ), thus exposing the root surface clinically. Recession is one of the most prevalent mucogingival conditions worldwide, affecting between 30% to 100% of the overall population, and its incidence increases with age. Main concerns regarding recession ranging from unacceptable esthetics to the patient, dentinal hypersensitivity, development of carious and non-carious cervical lesions, or impairment of adequate plaque control. The ultimate aim for treating gingival recession is to provide complete coverage of the root with optimal esthetics and function. A wide range of surgical interventions have been investigated to provide for successful root coverage including rotational and advanced pedicle flaps, free gingival grafts, or regenerative modalities such as guided tissue regeneration. The predictability of surgical techniques depends on patient related factors such as smoking, oral hygiene care and compliance, defect related conditions like depth, width, gingival thickness and interdental attachment level, and finally, operator related skills and experience. Coronally advanced flap (CAF) with or without the use of connective tissue graft is considered the gold standard for root coverage due to its ability to achieve complete root coverage in favorable defects, superior esthetic outcomes and blending with surrounding gingiva, and the possible realignment and increase in keratinized tissue height. On the other hand, CAF is faced with multiple drawbacks. Complete root coverage in CAF procedures is not predictable in cases with interdental attachment loss. The surgery poses added morbidity, discomfort and pain, and donor site (if present) may augment these complications. Scar formation as a result of incisions or sutures may reduce the overall esthetic appeal. It requires frequent follow-up visits and arduous post-operative instructions. Post-operative results are not stable over long period of time with frequent relapse. The procedure cannot be performed in cases with systemic contraindications for surgical interventions. And finally, it is time-consuming and requires surgical skill and training of the operator. To overcome all of the abovementioned drawbacks of CAF, composite resin restorative material with pink shades known as gingival composite has been proposed to manage gingival recessions. Root coverage with composite is known to effectively reduce dentinal hypersensitivity effectively. Hence, managing gingival recession with this restorative procedure, the patients concerns regarding esthetics or hypersensitivity can be directly addressed using a simple and fast technique. Compared to CAF, restorative procedure shows less pain, morbidity and bleeding, and it does not involve surgical incisions/sutures and hence avoids no scar formation. Pink composite can be presented as a solution in cases that are not expected to benefit from CAF such as RT3, and it can treat carious and non-carious cervical lesions in one step. In addition, it requires less operative time and can be performed by general practitioners and with conventional armamentarium.

Interventions

flap surgery to achieve root coverage at gingival recession defect

PROCEDURErestorative intervention

colored composite restoration to camouflage the gingival recession defect

Sponsors

Cairo University
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to 60 Years
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

* participants with at least one buccal gingival recession * O'Leary plaque index less than 20% * motivated participants willing to complete the follow up

Exclusion criteria

* prior surgical or restorative interventions at the recession defect * smokers * pregnant participants * systemic conditions contraindicating dental management

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
post-operative pain7 daysself-reported pain on visual analogue scale (VAS)

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
overall quality of life: questionnaire6 monthsself reported through a questionnaire
Reported post-operative satisfaction6 monthsquestionnaire
mean root coverage6 monthspercentage
complete root coverage6 monthspercentage
post-operative pain1,3,5,14 daysself-reported pain on VAS
Recession depthbaseline, 6 monthsin mm
Plaque indexbaseline, 6 monthspercentage
Bleeding indexbaseline, 6 monthspercentage
Probing depthbaseline, 6 monthsin mm

Contacts

Primary ContactAhmed Elfana, MSc
ahmed.abdelraouf@dentistry.cu.edu.eg+2011101102221
Backup ContactKarim Fawzy El-Sayed, PhD

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026