Author:
Li Mengdi,Liu ZhiXu,Yang Xiao,Zhu Min,Ni Jing
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Patients with skeletal angle Class III malocclusion usually have inadequate hard and soft tissue volume at the mandibular anterior teeth. The labial proclination at the teeth may lead to gingival recession. The purpose of this study was to explore whether periodontal phenotype modification therapy with soft tissue augmentation (PhMT-s) can prevent gingival recession in these patients.
Methods
Four patients with skeletal Class III malocclusion and a thin periodontal phenotype underwent surgical-orthodontic treatment. Prior to tooth movement, they underwent a minimally invasive vestibular incision with subperiosteal tunnel access combined with autogenous connective tissue grafts for periodontal phenotype modification with soft tissue augmentation (PhMT-s). The labial gingival thickness of the anterior mandibular teeth was measured at three distinct levels: at the cementoenamel junction (GT0), 3 mm apical to the CEJ (GT3), and 6 mm apical to the CEJ (GT6). These measurements were taken at baseline, three months following PhMT-s, and after tooth decompensation. Additionally, a biopsy sample was obtained from the PhMT-s site of one patient. All sections were subsequently stained using hematoxylin and eosin, Masson trichrome, Sirius Red, and immunohistochemistry.
Results
The thickness of the labial gingiva was increased about 0.42 to 2.00 mm after PhMT-s. At the end of pre-orthognathic surgical orthodontic treatment, the thickness of the labial gingiva was increased about − 0.14 to 1.32 mm compared to the baseline and no gingival recession occurred after the pre-orthognathic surgical orthodontic treatment. The histologic results demonstrated that the grafts obtained from the PhMT-s site exhibited increased deposition of collagen fibers. Moreover, the proportion of type III collagen increased and the grafts displayed significantly reduced positive expression of CD31 and OCN.
Conclusions
PhMT-s increased the thickness of the soft tissue, stabilizing the gingival margin for teeth exhibiting a thin periodontal phenotype and undergoing labial movement. This is attributed to the increased deposition of collagen fibers.
Funder
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Cross-disciplinary Research Fund of Shanghai Ninth People’s Hospital, Shanghai Jiao Tong university School of Medicine
Teachers Practice Plan of Shanghai University
Clinical Research Project of Multi-Disciplinary Team, Shanghai Ninth People’s Hospital, Shanghai JiaoTong University School of Medicine
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference23 articles.
1. Jing WD, Xu L, Xu X, Hou JX, Li XT. Association between Periodontal Biotype and Clinical parameters: a cross-sectional study in patients with skeletal class III malocclusion. Chin J Dent Res. 2019;22:9–19.
2. Jing WD, Xu L, Li XT, et al. Prevalence of and risk factors for alveolar fenestration and dehiscence in the anterior teeth of Chinese patients with skeletal class III malocclusion. Am J Orthod Dentofac Orthop. 2021;159:312–20.
3. Wang CW, Yu SH, Mandelaris GA, Wang HL. Is periodontal phenotype modification therapy beneficial for patients receiving orthodontic treatment? An American Academy of Periodontology best evidence review. J Periodontol. 2020;91:299–310.
4. Vannala V, Katta A, Reddy MS, et al. Periodontal Accelerated Osteogenic Orthodontics Technique for Rapid Orthodontic Tooth Movement: a systematic review. J Pharm Bioallied Sci. 2019;11:S97–106.
5. Mandelaris GA, Huang I, Relle R, Vence BS, DeGroot BS. Surgically facilitated Orthodontic Therapy (SFOT): diagnosis and indications in Interdisciplinary Dentofacial Therapy Involving Tooth Movement. Clin Adv Periodontics. 2020;10:204–12.