PRF Regenerative Therapy

Modern Dentistry Is Moving Toward Regenerative Healing

Dentistry today is evolving far beyond simply repairing damage. Modern regenerative dentistry focuses on supporting the body’s own healing potential using biologic concepts, advanced surgical technology, and minimally invasive treatment philosophies.

One of the most exciting advancements in modern regenerative dentistry is PRF therapy, also known as Platelet-Rich Fibrin.

PRF utilizes the patient’s own blood-derived healing components and growth factors to help support:

  • Bone regeneration
  • Soft tissue healing
  • Reduced inflammation
  • Improved tissue quality
  • Surgical healing response

At Dr. Doctor’s office, PRF therapy is incorporated throughout many implant, surgical, regenerative, and wellness-focused procedures to help support more advanced biologic healing.

What Is PRF?

PRF (Platelet-Rich Fibrin) is a regenerative biologic material created from the patient’s own blood.

A small blood sample is collected similarly to a routine medical blood draw. The blood is then processed using highly specialized centrifuge systems designed to separate and concentrate the body’s natural healing components.

The resulting PRF material contains:

  • Platelets
  • Growth factors
  • Fibrin matrix proteins
  • Healing cytokines
  • Regenerative cellular components

These biologic materials may then be utilized throughout surgical and regenerative procedures to help
support tissue healing and regeneration.

Advanced Centrifuge Technology

PRF quality depends heavily on how the biologic material is processed and prepared.

Dr. Doctor’s office incorporates advanced Italian-made centrifuge technology designed specifically for
regenerative biologic applications.

These systems allow highly controlled preparation of PRF protocols and regenerative biologic materials.

The office has also pursued advanced education and training involving PRF regenerative therapy
concepts, including education associated with internationally recognized leaders in regenerative dentistry.

Modern regenerative dentistry continues evolving rapidly, and advanced PRF protocols now play a major
role in implant surgery, bone grafting, periodontal regeneration, and facial soft tissue healing concepts.

How PRF Is Used in Dentistry

PRF therapy may be incorporated into many different procedures throughout modern dentistry.

Depending on the patient’s needs, PRF may be used during:

  • Dental implant surgery
  • Bone grafting procedures
  • Socket preservation
  • Sinus augmentation
  • Gum grafting procedures
  • Periodontal regeneration
  • Oral surgery healing support

PRF may be utilized alone or combined with grafting materials, membranes, and regenerative surgical
concepts.

In many situations, PRF can be transformed into various regenerative forms including:

  • PRF membranes
  • Injectable PRF
  • Sticky bone grafting concepts

These biologic materials help support regenerative healing and improved tissue integration.

Sticky Bone & Advanced Regenerative Concepts

One of the more advanced applications of PRF technology involves “sticky bone” regenerative concepts.

Sticky bone combines particulate grafting materials with concentrated PRF biologic components, creating a
cohesive regenerative graft matrix.

These techniques may help:

  • Improve graft stability
  • Support bone regeneration
  • Improve handling characteristics
  • Enhance biologic healing response

Advanced regenerative concepts continue transforming modern implant and reconstructive dentistry by
supporting more biologically driven healing approaches.

Wellness-Focused & Biologic Dentistry

PRF therapy represents a broader shift toward biologic and wellness-focused dentistry.

Instead of relying only on mechanical reconstruction, modern regenerative dentistry increasingly focuses
on:

  • Supporting the body’s healing systems
  • Reducing inflammation
  • Preserving healthy tissue
  • Minimizing surgical trauma
  • Improving long-term biologic stability

The office may also evaluate additional healing-related factors including:

  • Vitamin D levels
  • Diabetes and Al C levels
  • Smoking history
  • Systemic inflammation
  • Oral bacterial health

Successful regeneration depends on far more than simply placing graft material into a surgical site.

Technology, Biology & Comprehensive Healing

Dr. Doctor believes modern regenerative dentistry should combine:

  • Advanced biologic healing concepts
  • Digital treatment planning
  • Minimally invasive surgery
  • Precision-guided technology
  • Wellness-focused dentistry
  • Long-term tissue preservation

PRF regenerative therapy represents the merging of:

  • Biology
  • Technology
  • Surgical precision
  • Tissue regeneration
  • Comprehensive healing philosophies

The ultimate goal is not simply to complete procedures, but to help create healthier, stronger, more stable healing environments capable of supporting long-term oral health and implant success.