Stability of dental implants in microvascular osseous transplants |
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Authors: | Schultes Günter Gaggl Alexander Kärcher Hans |
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Affiliation: | Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, University Hospital Graz, Auenbruggerplatz 7, A-8036 Graz, Austria. guenter.schultes@kfunigraz.ac.at |
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Abstract: | Microvascular iliac crest and scapula transplants have been used in reconstruction of the lower jaw following tumor surgery. It has only been with the insertion of dental implants that a satisfactory prosthetic rehabilitation of the patient has been achieved. For this study, a follow-up of 38 patients with lower jaw tumors was carried out. The patients had been treated with partial resection of the lower jaw and neck dissection with microvascular iliac crest transplants (n = 20) or microvascular scapula transplants (n = 18); this was followed with dental implants (n = 143) in the region of the transplants or the local lower jaw. One hundred thirty-nine of the 143 dental implants were loaded by prosthetic superstructures. In all patients, the implant situation was evaluated on average 2 years 5 months after implantation. Periotest values, periimplant probing depths, and contact bleeding were registered, and the extent of periimplant bone loss was defined radiographically. The clinical situation in the region of the implant was compared for both types of implants and also with the nonresected lower jaw. The average Periotest values were within the normal range for all groups. In one scapula implant, however, a better average of Periotesting, -3.3, was found compared with implants of the iliac crest with Periotest values of -0.7. A measurement of -2.1 was found for the local lower jaw, similar to that of scapula implants. Pathologic probing depths were found for all three compared groups. The radiographically determined vertical loss of bone was the same for all three groups, on average 1 mm at 27 months postoperatively. The highest incidence of sulcus bleeding was found in the scapula implant group. Thus, it can be stated that the scapula transplants provide a similar transplant site to local lower jaw bone, whereas implants in iliac crest transplants show lesser bony stability. Periimplant soft-tissue conditions are worse for both types of transplants compared with local tissue of the lower jaw. |
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