Abstract

The aim was to test, whether or not soft tissue volume augmentation with a specifically designed collagen matrix (CM), leads to ridge width gain in chronic ridge defects similar to those obtained by an autogenous subepithelial connective tissue graft (SCTG). In six dogs, soft tissue volume augmentation was performed by randomly allocating three treatment modalities to chronic ridge defects [CM, SCTG and sham-operated control (Control)]. Dogs were sacrificed at 28 (n=3) and 84days (n=3). Descriptive histology and histomorphometric measurements were performed on non-decalcified sections. SCTG and CM demonstrated favourable tissue integration, and subsequent re-modelling over 84days. The overall mean amount of newly formed soft tissue (NMT) plus bone (NB) amounted to 3.8±1.2mm (Control), 6.4±0.9mm (CM) and 7.2±1.2mm (SCTG) at 28days. At 84days, the mean NMT plus NB reached 2.4±0.9mm (Control), 5.6±1.5mm (CM) and 6.0±2.1mm (SCTG). Statistically significant differences were observed between CM/SCTG and Control at both time-points (p<0.05). Within the limits of this animal model, the CM performed similar to the SCTG, based on histomorphometric outcomes combining NB and NMT.

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