When a tooth genuinely can't be saved, then it must be taken out. Keeping a tooth that's harboring infection isn't good for the body. Most places will take the tooth out and send you on your way if you don't want bone grafting. A biologic extraction is different: it pays close attention to cleaning the site thoroughly and supporting the way it heals afterward.
Two things set it apart. First, ozonated water is used to disinfect the socket during the procedure. Second, we take a little of your blood to make PRF (platelet-rich fibrin). The blood draw is done right in the office, the vials are spun in a centrifuge to separate the blood into layers, and we take the platelets, white blood cells, and growth factors and place them back into the socket (along with some collagen foam) to support natural healing. The aim is a clean extraction and a comfortable recovery, with less risk of a dry socket.
Depending on the site, a bone graft is sometimes necessary. The pros and cons are always reviewed with you, so you can decide how to proceed. Right now, a bovine graft with a porcine collagen membrane is used when more significant bone augmentation is needed. We're also looking into a synthetic, osteoconductive bioceramic graft made from roughly 90% hydroxyapatite and 10% beta-tricalcium phosphate, though that one would have to be specially ordered.
Every extraction package also includes a little goodie bag to support your recovery: arnica tablets, ginger and turmeric capsules, and vitamin D3/K2 drops.