Platelet-Rich Plasma Aids Healing

Dentistry Today

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The use of platelet rich plasma (PRP) following tooth removal appears to speed healing and bone formation, according to a recent article in the Journal of Oral Implantology. “Patients and clinicians could benefit if a cost-effective, simple technique were available that decreased bone-healing time and increased the predictability of favorable results,” the authors write. For the study, radiography techniques were used with patients to detect bone changes after surgery to re­move molars—specifically, the bilateral mandibular third molar. For each pa­tient, one extraction site was treated with PRP and the site on the other side of the mouth was not, serving as the control. Three patients received PRP on the right side and 3 on the left. The patients returned after the operation for evaluations and digital radiographs at 3 days plus weeks 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 12, 16, 20, and 24. Observers checked them visually to evaluate the extraction site’s tissue opening, bleeding, inflammation, facial ede­ma, and pain. 

The early radiographs found a significant increase in bone density in the PRP-treated sites. “The PRP treatment had a positive effect on bone density immediately following tooth extraction,” the authors write, while the control site had a decrease in bone density during the first week after surgery. After the initial 2 weeks, both sites had relatively parallel increases in bone density. “It took ap­proximately 6 weeks for the control sites to reach the same bone density that the PRP-treated site had reached by week one,” according to the article. “The im­mediate start of bone formation seen with PRP treatment is of clinical relevance because it is the initial 2 weeks following bone-manipulation oral surgery that are important.” 

Patients did not report significant differences in their perception of pain, bleeding, numbness, facial edema, or temperature between the different sites, according to the study. Faster bone formation could benefit patients who need immediate prostheses or dental im­plants, according to the article’s authors, because the current 4- to 6-month wait for these could be reduced to 2 to 4 months if PRP is used. Some studies report that PRP does not affect bone formation yet others, such as this study, do report faster bone formation. Rutkowski, et al hypothesize that it is how the PRP is prepared and what time points are used for measurement that influence bone formation results. Overall, the authors conclude that PRP increases the rate of bone formation and decreases the healing time during the initial 2 weeks after surgery, helping patients return to “full function” sooner. 


(Source: Journal of Im­plantology news release, April 19, 2010; complete article available at www2.al­lenpress.com/pdf/ORIM36.1FNL.pdf