Simini Boards Cast
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✂️ Practical relevance for surgical application
🧠 Flashcard-style recaps + board-style questions
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Simini Boards Cast
Chapter 87 - Part C: To Close or Not to Close: When Oral Wounds Should Heal Open
In this BoardsCast episode, we continue Tobias Chapter 87 – Soft Tissues of the Oral Cavity by challenging one of the biggest misconceptions in oral surgery:
Not all wounds in the mouth should be closed.
Some should heal open — and in many cases, closure actually makes things worse.
Oral soft tissue is elastic, mobile, contaminated, enzyme-rich, and highly vascular. These factors make it excellent at healing… but terrible at holding tension. This episode explains when closure helps, when it harms, and how to know the difference.
You’ll learn:
- Why some oral wounds fail when closed but succeed when left open
- The difference between mucosa, gingiva, and mucoperiosteum in wound management
- How blood supply, motion, and salivary contamination change closure strategy
- When primary closure is mandatory — and when it is a liability
- The physiologic basis of second-intention oral healing
- How to avoid tension, flap necrosis, and dehiscence
- Board-relevant patterns in oral trauma, extractions, tumor excisions & fistula repairs
If you’ve ever wondered, “Should I close this, or is nature going to do a better job?”, this episode gives you a rulebook straight from Tobias.
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