TOOTH EXTRACTION STATUS NOS
Clinical trials for TOOTH EXTRACTION STATUS NOS explained in plain language.
Never miss a new study
Get alerted when new TOOTH EXTRACTION STATUS NOS trials appear
Sign up with your email to follow new studies for TOOTH EXTRACTION STATUS NOS, keep track of the ones that matter, and come back to a personal dashboard instead of checking manually.
Genom att skicka in godkänner du våra Användarvillkor
-
Tiny screws vs. teeth: which works better for braces?
Disease control CompletedThis study compared two methods for moving teeth during orthodontic treatment after premolar extractions. Researchers tested whether using tiny temporary screws (MINISCREW) placed in the jawbone works better than using other teeth for anchorage when closing extraction spaces. The…
Matched conditions: TOOTH EXTRACTION STATUS NOS
Phase: NA • Sponsor: Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris • Aim: Disease control
Last updated Apr 02, 2026 14:56 UTC
-
Turning extracted teeth into healing grafts: a new hope for better dental implants
Disease control CompletedThis study tested a new method to improve healing and appearance after placing a dental implant immediately following a front tooth extraction. Researchers compared a standard technique to a new approach that uses processed material from the patient's own extracted tooth as a gra…
Matched conditions: TOOTH EXTRACTION STATUS NOS
Phase: NA • Sponsor: Kafrelsheikh University • Aim: Disease control
Last updated Mar 16, 2026 15:27 UTC
-
Spice in your smile: could turmeric speed up healing after a tooth pull?
Symptom relief CompletedThis small study tested if placing curcumin, the active compound in turmeric, into a fresh tooth socket could help the gums heal faster and improve bone regrowth. It compared curcumin to a standard blood-clotting treatment (PRF) and to doing nothing extra. Researchers measured pa…
Matched conditions: TOOTH EXTRACTION STATUS NOS
Phase: PHASE1 • Sponsor: Rania Farouk Mohamed Abdulmaguid • Aim: Symptom relief
Last updated Apr 04, 2026 01:36 UTC
-
Seeing red (or green or blue) to calm dental fears?
Symptom relief CompletedThis study tested whether wearing glasses with colored lenses (green, red, or blue) could help reduce anxiety and pain for people having a tooth pulled. Researchers measured changes in anxiety, pain, heart rate, and stress hormones in 84 participants before and after they wore th…
Matched conditions: TOOTH EXTRACTION STATUS NOS
Phase: NA • Sponsor: Selcuk University • Aim: Symptom relief
Last updated Apr 01, 2026 14:43 UTC