A retrospective clinical and radiologic study of teeth re‐implanted following traumatic avulsion

Abstract
Re-implantation is the recommended therapeutic procedure following traumatic exarticulation of teeth though its long-term prognosis remains controversial. The purpose of the following study was to evaluate the periodontal healing of 33 reimplanted incisors lost after trauma. The sample, which included 24 upper and 9 lower incisors, was divided in two groups: 15 teeth were reimplanted within 1 hour (=Group A) and 21 teeth after 3 hours or more (=Group B). The reimplanted teeth were followed for different radiographic evaluation periods up to 5 years (mean = 2–9 years). The results showed a high rate of periodontal healing in Group A (66.7%), while Group B demonstrated a high percentage (83.3%) of both inflammatory and replacement resorption. Thus, even if the whole sample was prevented from drying before reimplantation, the teeth were affected by different rates of root resorption. Among the various prognostic factors suggested by the literature, bacterial contamination during extra-alveolar storage seemed the most critical.