View clinical trials related to Guided Bone Regeneration.
Filter by:The goal of this observational study is to measure in real practice the performance and safety of RTR+Membrane, a synthetic dental membrane for guided tissue regeneration in periodontal or dental implant surgery. The main question it aims to answer is to measure the post-operative wound healing several months after surgery. Participants will be followed after their dental surgery via clinical examination and radiological and photos images.
This study aims to compare the clinical outcome before and after augmentation in case series of 10 patients. The main question it aims to answer is Whether the semi-rigid shell system facilitates bone regeneration in moderate to severe alveolar bone defects after 4 months of bone augmentation. Participants with bone defects between 3 to 8 millimeters (moderate to severe bone defect) will be treated with xenograft covered with the semi-rigid shell barrier system as a stage approach technique for implant placement.
Dental implants have been on the market for several years and they are routinely used to replace single/multiple missing teeth with a high success rate. However, there is still a limited number of studies comparing hydrophilic titanium and zirconia implants. In addition, there is no data available on the signalling pathways and the expression of healing biomarkers involved in the early stages of osseointegration around zirconia surface implants placed with guided bone regeneration (GBR). This study aims 1) to describe and compare the early wound healing molecular pathways, and the 2) vascularization patterns of mucosal tissues after the placement of hydrophilic titanium or zirconia implants with simultaneous guided bone regeneration (GBR). In this study, the investigators will assess the expression of inflammatory, angiogenesis and osseous biomarkers of PICF at 3, 7, 15 and 30 days after the placement of hydrophilic titanium or zirconia dental implants with simultaneous GBR and of saliva at day 1, 3, 7, 15 and 30.
This is a Phase 1 study to evaluate the safety profile of autologous-derived SB cells to enhance osseointegration of GBR in patients undergoing dental implant surgery.
The main target of the study is to compare ultra-narrow diameter implants (2.75 mm) without bone regeneration versus standard diameter implants (4.3 mm) in combination with bone regeneration. To do so, patients with missing upper central incisors, canines, first or second premolars with alveolar ridges of 6 - 8 mm of thickness will be restored with dental implants. Cone beam computed tomographic examination and clinical values will be registered before and after the surgical procedure at 6 and 12 months.