In the present case series, we performed implant surgery using a modified roll envelope technique and an apically repositioned flap (MRARF). To improve patients’ peri-implant soft tissue phenotypes, they underwent dental implantation following the buccal contour concavities, inadequate keratinized tissue width, and soft tissue thickness simultaneously. This case series includes 4 patients treated between July 2021 and February 2022 who received dental implants and guided bone regeneration treatment 6 months earlier and were to be taken up for second-stage surgery. They were eligible for the MRARF technique if each implant site showed a labial and buccal deficiency and a reduced keratinized mucosa width than the adjacent teeth. Sutures were removed 2 weeks after surgery, and a provisional restoration was delivered. A final impression was taken at 6 weeks to produce the definitive implant-supported restoration. All surgery sites healed uneventfully, and no postoperative pain or excessive swelling was reported. The modified flap design allowed for increasing the width and thickness of keratinized mucosa with a minimally invasive technique. A harmonious color, texture, and mucogingival junction position that matched the surrounding tissue and adjacent teeth was achieved, and all patients were satisfied with the final results. MRARF at second-stage implant surgery could obtain satisfactory results regarding vertical and horizontal aesthetic gingival contours and an adequate width and thickness of keratinized mucosa around the implants.

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