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Clinical Evaluation of Tunneled Coronally Advanced Flap v.s Coronally Advanced Flap With Graft for Gingival Recession

Clinical Evaluation of Tunneled Coronally Advanced Flap v.s Coronally Advanced Flap With Graft for Gingival Recession

Recruiting
18 years and older
All
Phase N/A

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Overview

The goal of this clinical trial is to evaluate gingival recession depth reduction using tunneled coronally advanced flap compared to coronally advanced flap, both combined with connective tissue graft in patients with isolated RT2 gingival recession sites.

Description

Gingival recession can cause clinical conditions that could be of main concern for patients. Techniques aiming for coverage of the gingival recession aim to address dentin hypersensitivity, non-carious cervical lesions (NCCLs) and enhance patient's esthetics (Cortellini & Bissada, 2018). Mid-buccal gingival recessions have been associated with patient's esthetic discomfort (Zucchelli & Mounssif, 2015). Most of the studies in the literature focus on the treatment of RT1 recession as they have the most favorable prognosis of full root coverage (Barootchi et al., 2020). Despite most studies focusing their attention on RT1 cases, RT2 defects are found to be the most prevalent type with 88.8% among patients according to (Romandini et al., 2020).

The coronally advanced flap and the tunneling technique are the most commonly performed surgical approaches for treating gingival recessions. However, these two approaches have commonly been regarded as alternatives to each other, with clinicians choosing to perform only one of them during root coverage procedures.

(Barootchi & Tavelli, 2022) aimed in his conducted case series to designate a surgical technique to treat isolated RT2 gingival recession defects in which he was trying to achieve and combine the advantage of both better access and graft stabilization in CAF and the preservation of the integrity of the papilla and better blood supply to the graft present in tunneling technique. The study concluded that the combination of both techniques in the same surgical design can have the potential to enhance flap and graft vascularization and improve clinical, esthetic, and patient-reported outcomes. To our knowledge, there is no conducted randomized clinical trials comparing the tunneled coronally advanced flap technique to the coronally advanced flap for gingival depth reduction.

So, this clinical trial aims to address this gap of the literature.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  1. Patients age 18 years or older.
  2. Isolated recession defect classified as RT2.
  3. Patients with healthy systemic condition.
  4. Clinical indication and/or patient request for root coverage.
  5. O'Leary index less than 20%.

Exclusion Criteria:

  1. Pregnant females
  2. Smokers: a contraindication for any plastic periodontal surgery.
  3. Unmotivated and uncooperative patients with poor oral hygiene
  4. Patients with habits that may compromise the longevity and affect the result of the study as alcoholism or parafunctional habits.

Study details
    Gingival Recession
    Localized

NCT06553677

Cairo University

21 August 2025

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