Comparative study of the osseointegration of dental implants after different bone augmentation techniques: vascularized femur flap, non-vascularized femur graft and mandibular bone graft

2010 ◽  
Vol 22 (6) ◽  
pp. 594-599 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Emre Benlidayi ◽  
Alexander Gaggl ◽  
Heinz Bürger ◽  
Christian Brandner ◽  
Mehmet Kurkcu ◽  
...  
2018 ◽  
Vol 2018 ◽  
pp. 1-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ines Kovacic ◽  
Sanja Persic ◽  
Josip Kranjcic ◽  
Nikolina Lesic ◽  
Asja Celebic

Serious consequences of long-term complete denture wearing may be extreme residual ridge atrophy and a reduced area of keratinized oral mucosa of a denture-bearing area. This paper presents five clinical cases of extreme mandibular ridge atrophy, rehabilitated by means of mandibular overdentures retained by short mini dental implants. The patients had a reduced mandibular bone volume in the interforaminal region, bone height less than 10 mm, and buccolingual bone width less than 4 mm. In order to avoid bone augmentation, patients received four short mini dental implants (MDIs) (6 or 8 mm long; 2.0 or 2.5 mm wide) for the support of mandibular overdentures, which is a new rehabilitation option. After insertion, the MDIs were early loaded with new mandibular overdentures reinforced with the CoCr framework. The patients have been wearing their overdentures for 2 years. One MDI broke during insertion and a new one was added. One patient lost one MDI but successfully continued to wear the overdenture retained by the remaining three MDIs. Mean marginal bone loss (MBL) was 0.20 ± 0.19 mm. Patients significantly improved their OHRQoL and chewing function by reducing the summary scores of the OHIP-14 and the chewing function questionnaires. The improvements remained unchanged throughout the observation period.


2021 ◽  
pp. 21-27
Author(s):  
Yu.O. Kinash ◽  
L.V. Kinash

Today, despite the progress made in dental implantology, the problem of rehabilitation of patients with significant bone atrophy in parodontal diseases has not been fully studied. The study aims to review the current views of various authors on the aetiology and treatment of parodontal diseases, which caused multiple tooth loss and bone atrophy in patients with occlusal pathology, based on the literature sources of scientific and medical information. Object and methods of study. Analytical study of scientific and medical literature on the treatment of multiple and partial tooth loss in patients with parodontal diseases in bone atrophy with impaired jaw relationships and orthopaedic rehabilitation using dental implantation and methods of bone augmentation of the mandible and maxilla. The use of implants in orthopaedic treatment expands the possibilities of using fixed prostheses, satisfying patients functionally and aesthetically. In case when the preservation of teeth becomes impossible or impractical to ensure proper treatment of the patient, they can be removed and replaced with dentures on dental implants. According to Misch C. [6], the masticatory load, which is exerted on the bone tissue of the jaws by an implant, increases the density of the bone structure. When teeth are lost due to parodontitis, there is atrophy of the alveolar ridge and a change in the structure of bone tissue, which is characterized by an increase in the porosity of the cancellous bone [4;5;7]. Sufficient bone volume and density in the area of the planned implantation are the main and important parameters for achieving normalized primary implant stabilization [11]. Partial and complete loss of teeth, as well as parodontal diseases, are always accompanied by the bone tissue of alveolar bone tissue of varying severity [1;4;5;13]. Signs of parodontal diseases in dentition defects are always more pronounced than in intact dental arch. The disease progresses rapidly, the dentition is destroyed if appropriate occlusal therapy is not performed [13;14]. Systemic factors and comorbidities in patients also play a significant role in reducing the bone volume of the jaws. The relationship between decreased bone density and age-related hormonal changes in women, as well as at the gender level, has been studied. Thus, women have changes in bone architecture and less dense arrangement of trabeculae in the jawbones than men [15].Bone tissue has a distinguishing feature – loss of multiple teeth or parodontal diseases lead to a redistribution of functional load, which causes its resorption [7;20]. In this regard, tooth extraction inevitably leads to a decrease in bone volume. The success of dental implantation on the maxilla became partially possible due to the introduction of sinus lifting with the use of osteoplastic materials [12;20;21]. According to some scientists[21], the autogenous bone graft is the gold standard in regenerative processes due to its osteoinductive, osteoconductive, and osteointegration properties, which are necessary for the restoration of lost bone tissue. The use of dentin in human teeth as an autograft was first described in a clinical case report in 2003 [23]. In recent experiments, these materials have proven to be a real alternative to the bone graft. Thanks to the work of a group of researchers [23;24], significant efforts were made in the basic and clinical study to find the best bone graft material for osseointegration of implants in the maxillary sinus. The autogenous dentin graft (AutoBT; Korea Tooth Bank, Seoul, Korea) was first developed in 2008, and several clinical studies have praised the use of AutoBT in the sinus compared to other grafts. Given the current development of advanced technologies in dental implantation, dentists use navigation templates in their practice, which are made using CAD CAM technology to improve the quality of care for patients who have indications for dental implantation. New diagnostic approaches allow us to virtually plan, simplify, and speed up surgery, to ensure accuracy. Thanks to this technology, dentists optimize the location of dental implants, taking into account the difficult conditions specific to patients with parodontal pathology.


2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yong Yang ◽  
Huiting Hu ◽  
Mianyan Zeng ◽  
Hongxing Chu ◽  
Zekun Gan ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Few large-sample studies in China have focused on the early survival of dental implants. The present study aimed to report the early survival rates of implants and determine the related influencing factors. Methods All patients receiving dental implants at our institution between 2006 and 2017 were included. The endpoint of the study was early survival rates of implants, according to gender, age, maxilla/mandible, dental position, bone augmentation, bone augmentation category, immediate implant, submerged implant category, implant diameter, implant length, implant torque, and other related factors. Initially, SPSS22.0 was used for statistical analysis. The Chi-square test was used to screen all factors, and those with p < 0.05 were further introduced into a multiple logistic regression model to illustrate the risk factors for early survival rates of implants. Results In this study, we included 1078 cases (601 males and 477 females) with 2053 implants. After implantation, 1974 implants were retained, and the early survival rate was 96.15%. Patients aged 30–60 years (OR  2.392), with Class I bone quality (OR  3.689), bone augmentation (OR  1.742), immediate implantation (OR  3.509), and implant length < 10 mm (OR  2.972), were said to possess risk factors conducive to early survival rates. Conclusions The early survival rate of implants in our cohort exceeded 96%, with risk factors including age, tooth position, bone quality, implant length, bone augmentation surgery, and immediate implantation. When the above factors coexist, implant placement should be treated carefully.


2015 ◽  
Vol 21 (6) ◽  
pp. 705-715 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Fantini ◽  
F. De Crescenzio ◽  
L. Ciocca ◽  
F. Persiani

Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to describe two different approaches for manufacturing pre-formed titanium meshes to assist prosthetically guided bone regeneration of atrophic maxillary arches. Both methods are based on the use of additive manufacturing (AM) technologies and aim to limit at the minimal intervention the bone reconstructive surgery by virtual planning the surgical intervention for dental implants placement. Design/methodology/approach – Two patients with atrophic maxillary arches were scheduled for bone augmentation using pre-formed titanium mesh with particulate autogenous bone graft and alloplastic material. The complete workflow consists of four steps: three-dimensional (3D) acquisition of medical images and virtual planning, 3D modelling and design of the bone augmentation volume, manufacturing of biomodels and pre-formed meshes, clinical procedure and follow up. For what concerns the AM, fused deposition modelling (FDM) and direct metal laser sintering (DMLS) were used. Findings – For both patients, a post-operative control CT examination was scheduled to evaluate the progression of the regenerative process and verify the availability of an adequate amount of bone before the surgical intervention for dental implants placement. In both cases, the regenerated bone was sufficient to fix the implants in the planned position, improving the intervention quality and reducing the intervention time during surgery. Originality/value – A comparison between two novel methods, involving AM technologies are presented as viable and reproducible methods to assist the correct bone augmentation of atrophic patients, prior to implant placement for the final implant supported prosthetic rehabilitation.


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