| Literature DB >> 10412845 |
C R Richardson1, J T Mellonig, M A Brunsvold, H T McDonnell, D L Cochran.
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to compare the bovine derived xenograft (BDX) Bio-Oss to demineralized freeze dried bone allograft (DFDBA) in human intrabony defects. 17 healthy patients with no systemic disease with moderate-severe periodontitis (7 males, 10 females; aged 34-67), were treated. Surgically, defects were included only if the intraosseous defect depth was >3.0 mm. Final selection included 30 defects. The sites were randomly assigned treatment with DFDBA or BDX. Soft tissue and osseous defect measurements were taken the day of surgery and 6 months post-operatively at re-entry. Average baseline PD, CAL, and surgical defect depth for the DFDBA group were not statistically different from the BDX group. No adverse healing response occurred. The results showed a statistically significant improvement in PD and AL for both materials at 6 months in 26 defects (4 defects did not respond to therapy). Soft tissue measurements for the DFDBA group included PD reduction of 2.0+/-1.3 mm, and AL gain of 2.6+/-1.6 mm, while the BDX group showed a PD reduction of 3.0+/-1.7 mm, and AL gain of 3.6+/-1.8 mm. Osseous measurements showed bone fill of 2.4 mm (46.8%) for the DFDBA group and 3.0 mm (55.8%) for the BDX group. Defect resolution was 59.4% for the DFDBA group and 77.6% for the BDX group. Statistical analysis revealed there was no statistical difference between the 2 materials in all measurements.Entities:
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Year: 1999 PMID: 10412845 DOI: 10.1034/j.1600-051x.1999.260702.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Periodontol ISSN: 0303-6979 Impact factor: 8.728