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13:17 Oct 21, 2018 |
English to Polish translations [PRO] Medical - Medical: Dentistry / general | |||||||
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| Selected response from: Frank Szmulowicz, Ph. D. United States Local time: 10:18 | ||||||
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2 | leczenia recesji dziąseł metodą Pinhole Surgical Technique |
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Pinhole Surgical Technique |
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leczenia recesji dziąseł metodą Pinhole Surgical Technique Explanation: STOMATOLOGIA ESTETYCZNA Medycyna estetyczna i stomatologia wzajemnie się uzupełniają. Wykonujemy zabiegi z zakresu stomatologii zachowawczej, protetyki, implantologii, endodoncji, higienizacji i profilaktyki. Dr Monika Pilarska, jako pierwszy i jak dotąd jedyny lekarz z Polski, ukończyła w Los Angeles szkolenie z leczenia recesji dziąseł metodą Pinhole Surgical Technique autorstwa Dr. Chao. https://asmed-clinic.pl/stomatologia-estetyczna/ |
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32 mins |
Reference: Pinhole Surgical Technique Reference information: Pinhole Surgical Technique The Pinhole Surgical Technique Enter the Pinhole Surgical Technique (PST), a minimally invasive treatment option to reverse gingival recession without grafting or sutures. What is PST (also referred to as the Lunchtime Gum Lift or Pinhole Gum Rejuvenation)? It is a novel procedure that combines techniques from traditional periodontal surgical procedures, such as coronally positioned flaps and guided bone regeneration, to reverse gingival recession. A coronally positioned flap (CPF) is a technique that requires creating an incision in the sulcus and across the papillae of affected teeth, elevating a flap (either full or split thickness), pulling the flap coronally, and suturing it into place. These techniques are often combined with autogenous grafts, allografts (cadaver), or xenografts (animal). PST procedure Like a CPF, PST allows coronal positioning of the gingival margin to cover recession defects, but it is not done with the use of scalpels, periosteal elevators, or sutures. Instead, a small pinhole is created by piercing the mucosa apical to the mucogingival junction in the area of recession, and then inserting specialized instruments through that hole to elevate a full-thickness "flap" in an apico-coronal direction. Once the periosteum is elevated from the underlying bone and tooth, it easily can be pushed coronally. But how does it stay in the new coronal position during the healing period without stitching? This is where I think the real genius of this procedure is-collagen strips! These collagen strips are actually pieces of a resorbable collagen membrane called Bio-Gide (Geistlich Biomaterials), which has been used for decades in periodontics for periodontal regeneration-just not in this same way. With PST, the collagen membrane is cut into strips and placed through the pinhole that was used to elevate the periosteum. The strips are then pushed under the gingiva into the interproximal spaces, covering the facial surfaces of the previously exposed roots. And violà! The tissue is supported at the new position, and the strips assist in wound stabilization during healing to ensure root coverage. Reference: http://https://www.dentaleconomics.com/articles/print/volume... |
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