Soft Tissue Management In Periodontal Surgery To Achieve The Best Treatment: Factors Related To The Technique
Authors | ||
Issue | Vol 2 No 1 (2025): TALENTA Conference Series: Tropical Medicine (TM) | |
Section | Articles | |
Section |
Copyright (c) 2025 Talenta Conference Series: Tropical Medicinie (TM) ![]() This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License. |
|
Galley | ||
DOI: | https://doi.org/10.32734/tm.v2i1.2692 | |
Keywords: | Periodontal surgery wound healing blood solidity thickness of the | |
Published | 2025-07-31 |
Abstract
To successfully perform periodontal surgery, clinicians must consider several prognostic factors when managing soft tissue conditions. There are factors related to the patient, factors related to the tooth or site, and factors related to the technique that can be used better to estimate the patient's response to specific treatment and describe the overall result and predictability of the surgical process. To determine the level of factors related to the technique that affect the achievement of soft tissue management in periodontal surgery. The gingival tissue's vascular supply during and after periodontal surgery is essential to the tissue's ability to heal. Early group of blood formation and developing a clot binding that can survive mechanical forces operating on the interface between are essential for wound healing. Since soft tissue treatment directly impacts how wounds heal, it is the most critical component of successful plastic periodontal surgery. Technique-related factors are one of the keys to successful periodontal surgery. They can affect the blood supply and wound solidity, resulting in good soft tissue management.