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Sinus bone grafting procedures using ultrasonic bone surgery: 5-year experience.
67
Citations
41
References
2008
Year
EngineeringSinus ApproachBone RepairSinus WallSurgeryBiomedical EngineeringOsteoporosisOrthopaedic SurgeryRegenerative MedicineSynthetic Bone SubstituteBone RemodelingVascularized Bone GraftMaxillofacial SurgeryUltrasonic Bone SurgeryDistraction OsteogenesisEndoscopic Sinus SurgeryUltrasoundBone ImagingDentoalveolar SurgeryCraniofacial SurgeryMedicine
Ultrasonic bone surgery was recently introduced as an osteotomic technique; however, documentation is scarce. This article reports on the application of ultrasonic bone surgery for 53 bone-augmentation procedures in the posterior maxilla in 34 patients over 5 years. The initial residual bone height under the sinus varied between 1 and 9 mm (mean: 3.7 mm). Distribution according to residual bone height classes was 7.7% for Class B, 39.3% for Class C, and 53.0% for Class D. The procedures included bony window opening of the sinus, cortical and cancellous bone harvesting, and activation of the sinus wall. During the sinus approach, 2 of 53 membranes (3.8%) were perforated and covered with a membrane made of platelet-poor plasma. Bone grafting was carried out with autologous bone at 22 implant sites (18.8%), with a mixture of autologous bone and anorganic bovine bone mineral (Bio-Oss) at 29 sites (24.8%), and with Bio-Oss alone at 66 sites (56.4%). The perforated membranes healed uneventfully. At second-stage surgery, four implants failed. The survival rate of the 117 placed implants was 96.6%. No implant failed after loading. Performing the sinus grafting procedure with ultrasonic bone surgery limited the occurrence of membrane perforation; by changing the tips, all surgical steps were performed safely and comfortably.
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