Abstract
Aim
Alveolar ridge resorption following tooth extraction often renders a lateral bone augmentation inevitable. Some patients, however, suffer from severe early (during graft healing, Eres) and/or late (during follow-up, Lres) graft resorption. This study explored the hypothesis that the "individual phenotypic dimensions" may partially explains the degree of such resorptions.
Material & methods
Patients who underwent a guided bone regeneration (GBR) were screened for inclusion according to the following criteria: (1) a relatively symmetrical maxillary arch, (2) an intact contra-lateral alveolar bone dimension, (3) the presence of a pre-operative cone-beam CT (CBCT), (4) a CBCT taken immediately after GBR, and (5) at least one CBCT scan ≥6 months after surgery. CBCT scans from different timepoints were registered and imported into Mimics software (Materialise, Leuven, Belgium). Bone dimensions of the contra-lateral site of the augmentation, representing the "individual phenotypical dimension of the alveolar crest" (IPD) were super-imposed on the augmented site and registered accordingly. As such, Eres and Lres could be measured over time, in relation to the IPD (in 2D; per millimetre apically from the alveolar crest, in the centre of the GBR), as well as in 3D (the entire GBR, 2 mm away from the mesial, distal, and apical border for standardisation).
Results
A total of 17 patients (23 augmented sites) were included. After Eres, the outline of the augmentation was in general located ±1 mm outside the IPD, but ≥1,5 years after GBR, it further moved towards the IPD (85% within 0.5 mm distance).
Conclusions
Within the limitations of this study the results indicate that the dimensions of a lateral bone augmentation are defined by the "individual phenotypic bone boundaries" of the patient.
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