The goal of this clinical trial (2-arm) is to determine if the application of platelet rich fibrin (PRF) to palatal donor sites influence patients quality of life, sleep efficiency, and healing following mucogingival surgery. All patients were enrolled in the Air Force Post Graduate Dental School periodontics program and each patient required mucogingival surgery. The main question\[s\] it aims to answer \[is/are\]: * Does the application of PRF to palatal donor sites influence patient's quality of life following mucogingival surgery. \[outcome measure 1\] * Does the application of PRF to palatal donor sites influence patient's sleep quality following mucogingival surgery. \[outcome measure 2\] * Does the application of PRF to palatal donor sites influence palatal healing following mucogingival surgery. \[outcome measure 3\] Researchers will compare the application of PRF (test) as a palatal dressing to a commercially available product (control; oxidized cellulose membrane or collagen dressing) to determine the difference of effects. Participants will be randomly assigned to either receiving PRF or a commercially available product on the day of surgery. A survey response will be conducted at five time points (pre-operative, 24-hours, 72 hours, 1 week, 2 week) to obtain a quality of life metric. Sleep data was collected via a wearable device one week pre-surgical intervention and two weeks postoperatively. Finally, a clinical healing index was performed at 1 and 2 weeks post-operatively to obtain a healing score.
Age range
18 Years – 99 Years
Sex
ALL
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A starting point for the conversation — always confirm anything about your own eligibility, costs, and care with the study team and your doctor.
Quality of Life: OHIP-14 summative scores utilized as a quality of life metric at five different time points. These scores were compared between the test and control group.
Timeframe: Pre-surgical survey to 2 weeks following surgical intervention.
Sleep Quality: sleep efficiency index obtained from wearable device.
Timeframe: 1 week pre-surgery to 2-weeks following surgical intervention.