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Free grafts of palatal mucosa in mandibular vestibuloplasty.

H D Hall, +1 more
- 01 Aug 1970 - 
- Vol. 28, Iss: 8, pp 565-574
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This article is published in Journal of oral surgery.The article was published on 1970-08-01 and is currently open access. It has received 69 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Vestibuloplasty & Transplantation.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The Thickness of Masticatory Mucosa in the Human Hard Palate and Tuberosity as Potential Donor Sites for Ridge Augmentation Procedures

TL;DR: It was concluded that two different regions may be defined for soft tissue graft harvesting from an anatomic point of view: 1) in the canine-premolar region rather wide and shallow grafts may be harvested and 2) the tuberosity revealed a significantly more soft tissue thickness in comparison to the hard palate.
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Use of a porcine collagen matrix as an alternative to autogenous tissue for grafting oral soft tissue defects.

TL;DR: This porcine collagen matrix provides a biocompatible surgical material as an alternative to an autogenous transplant, thus obviating the need to harvest soft tissue autogenous grafts from other areas of the oral cavity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Thickness of Posterior Palatal Masticatory Mucosa: The Use of Computerized Tomography

TL;DR: The thickness measurements were performed on the images of 100 adult subjects who underwent CT on the maxilla for implant surgery to determine the differences in the mucosal thickness according to gender, age, tooth position, and depth of the palatal vault.
Journal ArticleDOI

Efficacy of “Thick” Acellular Human Dermis (AlloDerm) for Lower Eyelid Reconstruction: Comparison With Hard Palate and Thin AlloDerm Grafts

TL;DR: The authors demonstrated long-lasting improvement of lower eyelid position with placement of thick AlloDerm grafts duringLower eyelid reconstruction, and the results are comparable to hard palate grafts but perhaps superior to thin Allo derm grafting.
Journal ArticleDOI

The use of a new bilayer artificial dermis for vestibular extension.

TL;DR: A new bilayer artificial dermis composed of a collagen sponge with the silicone layer which is sloughed off as the mucous membrane heals was effective in nearly all patients in promoting haemostasis, relieving pain, inducing granulation, promoting rapid epithelialization, and preventing contracture.
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