The 3 R's for platelet-rich fibrin: A "super" tri-dimensional biomaterial for contemporary naturally-guided oro-maxillo-facial soft and hard tissue repair, reconstruction and regeneration
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Zumarán, Consuelo
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The 3 R's for platelet-rich fibrin: A "super" tri-dimensional biomaterial for contemporary naturally-guided oro-maxillo-facial soft and hard tissue repair, reconstruction and regeneration
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Abstract
Platelet-Rich fibrin (PRF) is a three-dimensional (3-D) autogenous biomaterial obtained
via simple and rapid centrifugation from the patient’s whole blood samples, without including
anti-coagulants, bovine thrombin, additives, or any gelifying agents. At the moment, it is safe to say
that in oral and maxillofacial surgery, PRFs (particularly, the pure platelet-rich fibrin or P-PRF and
leukocyte and platelet-rich fibrin or L-PRF sub-families) are receiving the most attention, essentially
because of their simplicity, cost-effectiveness, and user-friendliness/malleability; they are a fairly
new “revolutionary” step in second-generation therapies based on platelet concentration, indeed.
Yet, the clinical effectiveness of such surgical adjuvants or regenerative platelet concentrate-based
preparations continues to be highly debatable, primarily as a result of preparation protocol variability,
limited evidence-based clinical literature, and/or poor understanding of bio-components and
clinico-mechanical properties. To provide a practical update on the application of PRFs during
oral surgery procedures, this critical review focuses on evidence obtained from human randomized
and controlled clinical trials only. The aim is to serve the reader with current information on
the clinical potential, limitations, challenges, and prospects of PRFs. Accordingly, reports often
associate autologous PRFs with early bone formation and maturation; accelerated soft-tissue
healing; and reduced post-surgical edema, pain, and discomfort. An advanced and original tool in
regenerative dentistry, PRFs present a strong alternative and presumably cost-effective biomaterial for
oro-maxillo-facial tissue (soft and hard) repair and regeneration. Yet, preparation protocols continue
to be a source of confusion, thereby requiring revision and standardization. Moreover, to increase
the validity, comprehension, and therapeutic potential of the reported findings or observations,
a decent analysis of the mechanico-rheological properties, bio-components, and their bioactive
function is eagerly needed and awaited; afterwards, the field can progress toward a brand-new era of
“super” oro-dental biomaterials and bioscaffolds for use in oral and maxillofacial tissue repair and
regeneration, and beyond.
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Artículo de publicación SCOPUS
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URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/159168
DOI: 10.3390/ma11081293
ISSN: 19961944
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Materials, Volumen 11, Issue 8, 2018.
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