1. Preoperative buccal bone volume predicts long-term graft retention following augmentation in the esthetic zone: a retrospective case series
- Author
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Balazs Feher, Florian Frommlet, Christian Ulm, Reinhard Gruber, and Ulrike Kuchler
- Subjects
Male ,Bone Transplantation ,Treatment Outcome ,Dental Implantation, Endosseous ,Maxilla ,Humans ,Female ,610 Medicine & health ,Alveolar Ridge Augmentation ,Esthetics, Dental ,Oral Surgery ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
OBJECTIVES Buccal bone augmentation in the esthetic zone is routinely used to achieve optimal clinical outcomes. Nonetheless, long-term data are sparse, and it is unknown how baseline buccal bone volume affects the retention of the augmented volume over time. MATERIAL AND METHODS This is a long-term follow-up retrospective case series. After a preoperative computed tomography scan, implants were placed in the anterior maxilla following guided bone regeneration, autogenous block grafting, or both. At the follow-up, patients received a computed tomography scan and a clinical examination. Buccal bone volume was the primary outcome. Buccal bone thickness, peri-implant, and esthetic parameters were secondary outcomes. RESULTS After a median follow-up of 6.7 years (interquartile range: 4.9-9.4), 28 implants in 19 patients (median age at augmentation: 43.3 years, interquartile range: 34.4-56.7, 53% female) were followed up. Preoperative buccal bone volume at baseline (V0 ) showed a moderate correlation to final buccal bone volume (Vt , rs ��=��0.43) but a strong correlation to the absolute volumetric change (��V = Vt - V0 , rs ��=��-0.80). A linear mixed model for Vt had a large intercept of 91.39 (p��
- Published
- 2022
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