| Flap Surgery:
Our periodontist separates the gum from the teeth creating a "flap"
and accesses the infected pocket. It aims to reduce pocket depth
and increase the ability to maintain the remnant pockets clean.
Gingivectomy: This procedure is performed when
excess amounts of gum growth around the teeth have occurred. This
results in false pocket formation and the inability to keep them
clean.
Osseous (bone) surgery: This procedure is done
to smooth shallow craters and defects in the bone due to mild or
moderate bone loss.
Guided Tissue Regeneration: This procedure is
done in combination with a surgical flap operation where gum growth
into a defect is barriered off to allow slower growing bone, cementum
and ligament cells to populate a bony defect.
Bone Grafts: Tiny fragments of the patient's
bone, synthetic bone or bone obtained from a bone bank are used
to fill a bony defect around the teeth. These grafts act as a scaffold
on or around which patients own bone is conducted or induced to
grow.
Soft Tissue Graft (Gum Grafts): In cases of gum
recession a graft is usually taken from the palate and transplanted
onto the receding area to reinforce the thin gum and to inhibit
further gum recession. |