Surgical bone augmentation procedures for ...
Document type :
Article dans une revue scientifique: Article original
PMID :
Permalink :
Title :
Surgical bone augmentation procedures for oral rehabilitation of patients with oligodontia: a systematic review.
Author(s) :
Thuaire, Antoine [Auteur]
CIC CHU ( Lille)/inserm
Nicot, Romain [Auteur]
Advanced Drug Delivery Systems (ADDS) - U1008
Raoul, Gwénaël [Auteur]
CIC CHU ( Lille)/inserm
Lauwers, Ludovic [Auteur]
CIC CHU ( Lille)/inserm
Nicot, Romain [Auteur]
Advanced Drug Delivery Systems (ADDS) - U1008
Raoul, Gwénaël [Auteur]
CIC CHU ( Lille)/inserm
Lauwers, Ludovic [Auteur]
Journal title :
J Stomatol Oral Maxillofac Surg
Volume number :
124
Pages :
101370
Publisher :
Elsevier
Publication date :
2022-12-26
ISSN :
2468-7855
HAL domain(s) :
Sciences du Vivant [q-bio]
English abstract : [en]
Oligodontia is a developmental dental anomaly defined by the absence of 6 or more permanent teeth, excluding the third molars. We performed a review with a systematic approach and proposed a guideline for the choice of the ...
Show more >Oligodontia is a developmental dental anomaly defined by the absence of 6 or more permanent teeth, excluding the third molars. We performed a review with a systematic approach and proposed a guideline for the choice of the bone augmentation surgery. The different bone augmentation technique terms were searched in the PubMed and Science Direct database. Clinical studies were eligible if they reported on pre-implant surgery in patients with oligodontia. The database search yielded 400 studies after duplicates removed. Thirty studies were finally included, involving 410 patients. Sixty-three sinus lifts were performed in 37 patients with no failure. Thirteen out of 33 patients with iliac bone transplantation and two out of 24 with parietal bone transplantation had resorption, one out of 4 patients who received allogeneic bone block had complete failure. Seventy-eight patients underwent guided bone regeneration, none had bone loss. No failure was found with the alveolar distraction osteogenesis technique. Four out of thirteen patients developed permanent hypoesthesia after inferior alveolar nerve transposition. The cumulative implant survival rate was 94.4% after bone augmentation procedures. Extensive edentulous areas should be grafted with parietal bone, as iliac grafts present a greater risk of resorption. Smaller edentulous areas should be treated by endobuccal harvesting or guided bone regeneration. Osteogenesis distraction and nerve transposition are effective surgeries for medium-to-large mandibular edentulous spaces. The implant survival rate is not significantly different between implants placed in grafted and nongrafted bone, the appropriate choice of bone augmentation technique can reduce the risk of peri‑implant bone resorption.Show less >
Show more >Oligodontia is a developmental dental anomaly defined by the absence of 6 or more permanent teeth, excluding the third molars. We performed a review with a systematic approach and proposed a guideline for the choice of the bone augmentation surgery. The different bone augmentation technique terms were searched in the PubMed and Science Direct database. Clinical studies were eligible if they reported on pre-implant surgery in patients with oligodontia. The database search yielded 400 studies after duplicates removed. Thirty studies were finally included, involving 410 patients. Sixty-three sinus lifts were performed in 37 patients with no failure. Thirteen out of 33 patients with iliac bone transplantation and two out of 24 with parietal bone transplantation had resorption, one out of 4 patients who received allogeneic bone block had complete failure. Seventy-eight patients underwent guided bone regeneration, none had bone loss. No failure was found with the alveolar distraction osteogenesis technique. Four out of thirteen patients developed permanent hypoesthesia after inferior alveolar nerve transposition. The cumulative implant survival rate was 94.4% after bone augmentation procedures. Extensive edentulous areas should be grafted with parietal bone, as iliac grafts present a greater risk of resorption. Smaller edentulous areas should be treated by endobuccal harvesting or guided bone regeneration. Osteogenesis distraction and nerve transposition are effective surgeries for medium-to-large mandibular edentulous spaces. The implant survival rate is not significantly different between implants placed in grafted and nongrafted bone, the appropriate choice of bone augmentation technique can reduce the risk of peri‑implant bone resorption.Show less >
Language :
Anglais
Audience :
Internationale
Administrative institution(s) :
Université de Lille
Inserm
CHU Lille
Inserm
CHU Lille
Collections :
Submission date :
2023-01-02T00:41:50Z
2023-02-08T08:51:12Z
2023-02-08T08:51:12Z