Clinical application of autologous fibroblast cell culture in gingival recession treatment
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2015
Authors
Milinković, Iva
Aleksić, Zoran
Janković, Saša
Popović, O.
Bajić, Miljan
Čakić, Saša
Leković, Vojislav
Article (Published version)

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Background and ObjectiveGingival recession is defined as soft and hard tissue displacement resulting in root surface exposure. The optimal outcome of gingival recession treatment is complete, predictable and long-lasting root coverage with a significant level of tissue regeneration. Tissue engineering, which applies active regeneration principles, presents the contemporary treatment approach in the restitution and regeneration of lost tissues. The objective of the present study was to evaluate and compare the clinical results of application of an autologous fibroblast cell culture (AFCC) on a collagen matrix and a connective tissue graft (CTG) placed under a coronally advanced flap (CAF), in the treatment of single and multiple gingival recessions. Material and MethodsEighteen patients from the Department of Periodontology, School of Dentistry, University of Belgrade, were randomly enrolled in this study. Inclusion criteria were the bilateral presence of Miller Class I or II single or ...multiple maxillary gingival recessions. A split-mouth design was used in the study. The experimental group was treated with AFCC on a collagen scaffold, which was placed under a CAF. The control group received a combination of CTG and CAF. Clinical parameters such as gingival recession coverage, keratinized tissue width, clinical attachment level and gingival index were recorded at baseline and at 12mo postoperatively. The oral hygiene level was assessed by plaque index evaluation. Postoperative healing was evaluated through the healing index, recorded 1, 2 and 3wk postoperatively. The final esthetic outcome was assessed using the mean root coverage esthetic score (RES). ResultsStatistically significant improvement of all parameters assessed was found compared with baseline. A statistically significant difference between groups was observed only in keratinized tissue width. Greater keratinized tissue width is still obtained with the use of CTG. Regarding the tissue-healing results, no statistically significant difference was achieved. The RES results were similar for both groups. ConclusionsWithin the limitations of the present study, both procedures proved to be efficient in gingival recession treatment. AFCC, as a novel tissue-engineering concept and living cell-based therapy, proved to be a reliable and successful treatment concept.
Keywords:
connective tissue graft / fibroblast cell culture / gingival recession / tissue engineeringSource:
Journal of Periodontal Research, 2015, 50, 3, 363-370Publisher:
- Wiley, Hoboken
Funding / projects:
DOI: 10.1111/jre.12215
ISSN: 0022-3484
PubMed: 25040690
WoS: 000353513000009
Scopus: 2-s2.0-84928266875
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Stomatološki fakultetTY - JOUR AU - Milinković, Iva AU - Aleksić, Zoran AU - Janković, Saša AU - Popović, O. AU - Bajić, Miljan AU - Čakić, Saša AU - Leković, Vojislav PY - 2015 UR - https://smile.stomf.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1977 AB - Background and ObjectiveGingival recession is defined as soft and hard tissue displacement resulting in root surface exposure. The optimal outcome of gingival recession treatment is complete, predictable and long-lasting root coverage with a significant level of tissue regeneration. Tissue engineering, which applies active regeneration principles, presents the contemporary treatment approach in the restitution and regeneration of lost tissues. The objective of the present study was to evaluate and compare the clinical results of application of an autologous fibroblast cell culture (AFCC) on a collagen matrix and a connective tissue graft (CTG) placed under a coronally advanced flap (CAF), in the treatment of single and multiple gingival recessions. Material and MethodsEighteen patients from the Department of Periodontology, School of Dentistry, University of Belgrade, were randomly enrolled in this study. Inclusion criteria were the bilateral presence of Miller Class I or II single or multiple maxillary gingival recessions. A split-mouth design was used in the study. The experimental group was treated with AFCC on a collagen scaffold, which was placed under a CAF. The control group received a combination of CTG and CAF. Clinical parameters such as gingival recession coverage, keratinized tissue width, clinical attachment level and gingival index were recorded at baseline and at 12mo postoperatively. The oral hygiene level was assessed by plaque index evaluation. Postoperative healing was evaluated through the healing index, recorded 1, 2 and 3wk postoperatively. The final esthetic outcome was assessed using the mean root coverage esthetic score (RES). ResultsStatistically significant improvement of all parameters assessed was found compared with baseline. A statistically significant difference between groups was observed only in keratinized tissue width. Greater keratinized tissue width is still obtained with the use of CTG. Regarding the tissue-healing results, no statistically significant difference was achieved. The RES results were similar for both groups. ConclusionsWithin the limitations of the present study, both procedures proved to be efficient in gingival recession treatment. AFCC, as a novel tissue-engineering concept and living cell-based therapy, proved to be a reliable and successful treatment concept. PB - Wiley, Hoboken T2 - Journal of Periodontal Research T1 - Clinical application of autologous fibroblast cell culture in gingival recession treatment VL - 50 IS - 3 SP - 363 EP - 370 DO - 10.1111/jre.12215 ER -
@article{ author = "Milinković, Iva and Aleksić, Zoran and Janković, Saša and Popović, O. and Bajić, Miljan and Čakić, Saša and Leković, Vojislav", year = "2015", abstract = "Background and ObjectiveGingival recession is defined as soft and hard tissue displacement resulting in root surface exposure. The optimal outcome of gingival recession treatment is complete, predictable and long-lasting root coverage with a significant level of tissue regeneration. Tissue engineering, which applies active regeneration principles, presents the contemporary treatment approach in the restitution and regeneration of lost tissues. The objective of the present study was to evaluate and compare the clinical results of application of an autologous fibroblast cell culture (AFCC) on a collagen matrix and a connective tissue graft (CTG) placed under a coronally advanced flap (CAF), in the treatment of single and multiple gingival recessions. Material and MethodsEighteen patients from the Department of Periodontology, School of Dentistry, University of Belgrade, were randomly enrolled in this study. Inclusion criteria were the bilateral presence of Miller Class I or II single or multiple maxillary gingival recessions. A split-mouth design was used in the study. The experimental group was treated with AFCC on a collagen scaffold, which was placed under a CAF. The control group received a combination of CTG and CAF. Clinical parameters such as gingival recession coverage, keratinized tissue width, clinical attachment level and gingival index were recorded at baseline and at 12mo postoperatively. The oral hygiene level was assessed by plaque index evaluation. Postoperative healing was evaluated through the healing index, recorded 1, 2 and 3wk postoperatively. The final esthetic outcome was assessed using the mean root coverage esthetic score (RES). ResultsStatistically significant improvement of all parameters assessed was found compared with baseline. A statistically significant difference between groups was observed only in keratinized tissue width. Greater keratinized tissue width is still obtained with the use of CTG. Regarding the tissue-healing results, no statistically significant difference was achieved. The RES results were similar for both groups. ConclusionsWithin the limitations of the present study, both procedures proved to be efficient in gingival recession treatment. AFCC, as a novel tissue-engineering concept and living cell-based therapy, proved to be a reliable and successful treatment concept.", publisher = "Wiley, Hoboken", journal = "Journal of Periodontal Research", title = "Clinical application of autologous fibroblast cell culture in gingival recession treatment", volume = "50", number = "3", pages = "363-370", doi = "10.1111/jre.12215" }
Milinković, I., Aleksić, Z., Janković, S., Popović, O., Bajić, M., Čakić, S.,& Leković, V.. (2015). Clinical application of autologous fibroblast cell culture in gingival recession treatment. in Journal of Periodontal Research Wiley, Hoboken., 50(3), 363-370. https://doi.org/10.1111/jre.12215
Milinković I, Aleksić Z, Janković S, Popović O, Bajić M, Čakić S, Leković V. Clinical application of autologous fibroblast cell culture in gingival recession treatment. in Journal of Periodontal Research. 2015;50(3):363-370. doi:10.1111/jre.12215 .
Milinković, Iva, Aleksić, Zoran, Janković, Saša, Popović, O., Bajić, Miljan, Čakić, Saša, Leković, Vojislav, "Clinical application of autologous fibroblast cell culture in gingival recession treatment" in Journal of Periodontal Research, 50, no. 3 (2015):363-370, https://doi.org/10.1111/jre.12215 . .