Vienna Cosmetic and Family Dentistry. The periodontist is Dr. Suwid. |
What does laser mean? To remove gum? |
It is a less invasive procedure to treat periodontitis if the case is not to severe. From internet Overview Traditional Gum Surgery vs. Laser Gum Surgery | Soft Touch Dentistry Laser gum treatment is a minimally invasive procedure that uses a laser to remove diseased tissue, resulting in less pain, faster healing, and no sutures, while traditional surgery uses a scalpel to cut tissue, which is more invasive, has a longer recovery, and requires sutures. A gum graft is a separate procedure often used after traditional surgery to repair significant tissue loss or gum recession. Laser treatment is often preferred for its gentler approach, but a graft may be necessary for severe cases of recession or tissue damage. |
+1. I've had both and refuse to take the tissue harvesting approach ever again. Nightmare. |
*Whoops. Meant to quote the cadaver procedure post! |
Allografts scare me because I'm worried about getting a prion disease. Are there any synthetic grafting methods that don't use humans or animal tissue? |
There is no viral or bacterial infection risk, but you can get Prions. They ate self replicating dysfunctional proteins that induce other proteins to change shape turn into prions. The scary thing about prions is that they are very dimensionally stable and resistant to temperature changes. It would take extreme heat to destroy the prions. Any method that is effective at destroying the prions would also destroy the cadaver tissue and make it unusable for gum grafts. |
| My teen son needs a gum graft. He has meticulous oral hygiene. I guess it’s genetic as DH also needed it young. After reading these posts I’m dreading this even more than I originally was. |