Objective: To volumetrically compare peri-implant mid-facial soft tissue changes in immediately placed and provisionalized implants in the aesthetic zone, with or without a connective tissue graft.
Material and methods: Sixty patients were included. All implants were placed immediately after extraction. After randomization, in one group, a connective tissue graft (test group, n = 30) was inserted at the buccal aspect of the implant. The other group (control group, n = 30) received no connective tissue graft. Clinical parameters, digital photographs and conventional impressions were obtained before extraction (Tpre ) and at 12 months following definitive crown placement (T12 ). The casts were digitized by a laboratory scanner, and a volumetric analysis was performed between Tpre and T12 .
Results: Twenty-five patients in each group were available for analysis at T12 . Volumetric change, transformed to a mean (±SD) change in thickness, was -0.68 ± 0.59 mm (test) and -0.49 ± 0.54 mm (control) with a non-significant difference between groups (p = .189). The mid-facial mucosa level was significantly different between both groups (p = .014), with a mean (±SD) change of +0.20 ± 0.70 mm (test) and -0.48 ± 1.13 mm (control). The Pink Esthetic Score was similar between both groups.
Conclusions: The use of a CTG in immediately placed and provisionalized implants in the aesthetic zone did not result in less mucosal volume loss after 12 months, leading to the assumption that a CTG cannot fully compensate for the underlying facial bone loss, although a significantly more coronally located mid-facial mucosa level was found when a CTG was performed.
Keywords: aesthetic zone; immediate placement; soft tissue graft; volumetric changes.
© 2018 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.