Treatment of patients with extreme maxillary atrophy using sinus floor augmentation and implants: preliminary results |
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Authors: | G. Watzek R. Weber Th. Bernhart Ch. Ulm R. Haas |
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Affiliation: | aDepartment of Oral Surgery, University of Vienna, School of Dentistry, Vienna, Austria |
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Abstract: | Twenty consecutive patients with extreme maxillary atrophy underwent bilateral sinus floor augmentation, either with autogenous bone from the iliac crest or with a combination of autogenous bone and hydroxyapatite. One patient was treated using autogenous bone from the chin region. After a period of three to eight months, three to four implants were placed in each posterior maxilla. Only 10 out of 155 inserted implants were located in the anterior non-augmented maxilla. During the observation period of one to six years, four implants (one of them located in the anterior maxilla) had to be removed prior to prosthetic treatment. Another three implants were lost during the follow up period. This corresponds to a Kaplan-Meier survival probability of 95.4% after 70 months. No statistically significant difference in implant success was observed between women and men (P=0.16). All prosthetic suprastructures are still in function despite these implant losses. Mean peri-implant bone resorption was 1.34 mm with no statistically significant difference between implants placed more mesially and those placed more distally in the augmented area, though a trend could be observed (P=0.058) for a more pronounced bone resorption around implants placed in the premolar region. When a mean mesial and distal bone resorption of >2 mm was considered in the calculation of the success prognosis, the survival probability dropped to 74.7% after 70 months. |
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Keywords: | maxillary atrophy sinus floor elevation endosteal implants |
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