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      Efficacy of Alveolar Ridge Preservation after Maxillary Molar Extraction in Reducing Crestal Bone Resorption and Sinus Pneumatization: A Multicenter Prospective Case-Control Study

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          Abstract

          Aim

          To evaluate, with three-dimensional analysis, the effectiveness of alveolar ridge preservation (ARP) after maxillary molar extraction in reducing alveolar bone resorption and maxillary sinus pneumatization when compared to unassisted socket healing.

          Methods

          Patients were included in the study following inclusion criteria and underwent minimally traumatic maxillary molar extraction followed by ARP using synthetic nanohydroxyapatite (Fisiograft Bone, Ghimas, Italy) (test group) or unassisted socket healing (control group). Cone-beam computerized tomographies (CBCT) were performed immediately after tooth extraction (T0) and 6 months postoperatively (T1). CBCTs were superimposed by using a specific software (Amira, Thermo Fisher Scientific, USA) and the following items were analyzed in both groups: (i) postextractive maxillary sinus floor expansion in coronal direction and (ii) postextractive alveolar bone dimensional changes (both vertical and horizontal). All data were tested for normality and equality of variance and subsequently analyzed by independent samples T-test and Mann–Whitney test.

          Results

          Thirty patients were treated by three centers and twenty-six (test n=13; control n=13) were included in the final analysis. Mean sinus pneumatization at T1 was 0.69±0.48 mm in the test group and 1.04±0.67 mm in the control group (p=0.15). Mean vertical reduction of the alveolar bone at T1 was 1.62±0.49 mm in the test group and 2.01±0.84 mm in the control group (p=0.08). Mean horizontal resorption of crestal bone at T1 was 2.73±1.68 mm in test group and 3.63±2.24 mm in control group (p=0.24).

          Conclusions

          It could be suggested that ARP performed after maxillary molar extraction may reduce the entity of sinus pneumatization and alveolar bone resorption, compared to unassisted socket healing. This technique could decrease the necessity of advanced regenerative procedures prior to dental implant placement in posterior maxilla.

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          Most cited references50

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          Bone healing and soft tissue contour changes following single-tooth extraction: a clinical and radiographic 12-month prospective study.

          Preservation of alveolar bone volume following tooth extraction facilitates subsequent placement of dental implants and leads to an improved esthetic and functional prosthodontic result. The aim of the present study was to assess bone formation in the alveolus and the contour changes of the alveolar process following tooth extraction. The tissue changes after removal of a premolar or molar in 46 patients were evaluated in a 12-month period by means of measurements on study casts, linear radiographic analyses, and subtraction radiography. The results demonstrated that major changes of an extraction site occurred during 1 year after tooth extraction.
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            Alveolar bone dimensional changes of post-extraction sockets in humans: a systematic review.

            To review the literature to assess the amount of change in height and width of the residual ridge after tooth extraction. MEDLINE-PubMed and the Cochrane Central register of controlled trials (CENTRAL) were searched through up to March 2009. Appropriate studies which data reported concerning the dimensional changes in alveolar height and width after tooth extraction were included. Approximal height change, mid-buccal change, mid-crestal change, mid-lingual change, Alveolar width change and socket fill were selected as outcome variables. Mean values and if available standard deviations were extracted. Weighted mean changes were calculated. Independent screening of the titles and abstracts of 1244 MEDLINE-PubMed and 106 Cochrane papers resulted in 12 publications that met the eligibility criteria. The reduction in width of the alveolar ridges was 3.87 mm. The mean clinical mid-buccal height loss was 1.67 mm. The mean crestal height change as assessed on the radiographs was 1.53 mm. Socket fill in height as measured relative to the original socket floor was on an average 2.57 mm. During the post-extraction healing period, the weighted mean changes as based on the data derived from the individual selected studies show the clinical loss in width to be greater than the loss in height, assessed both clinically as well as radiographically.
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              Wolff's Law and bone's structural adaptations to mechanical usage: an overview for clinicians.

              H. Frost (1994)
              Basic Multicellular Unit-based bone remodeling can lead to the removal or conservation of bone, but cannot add to it. Decreased mechanical usage (MU) and acute disuse result in loss of bone next to marrow; normal and hypervigorous MU result in bone conservation. Bone modeling by resorption and formation drifts can add bone and reshape the trabeculae and cortex to strengthen them but collectively they do not remove bone. Hypervigorous MU turns this modeling on, and its architectural effects then lower typical peak bone strains caused by future loads of the same kind to a threshold range. Decreased and normal MU leave this modeling off. Where typical peak bone strains stay below a 50 microstrain region (the MESr) the largest disuse effects on remodeling occur. Larger strains depress it and make it conserve existing bone. Strains above a 1500 microstrain region (the MESm) tend to turn lamellar bone modeling drifts on. By adding to, reshaping and strengthening bone, those drifts reduce future strains under the same mechanical loads towards that strain region. Strains above a 3000 microstrain region (the MESp) can turn woven bone drifts on to suppress local lamellar drifts but can strengthen bone faster than lamellar drifts can. Such strains also increase bone microdamage and the remodeling that normally repairs it. Those values compare to bone's fracture strain of about 25,000 microstrain.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Biomed Res Int
                Biomed Res Int
                BMRI
                BioMed Research International
                Hindawi
                2314-6133
                2314-6141
                2018
                4 November 2018
                : 2018
                : 9352130
                Affiliations
                1Private Practice, Cassano allo Ionio (CS), Italy
                2Private Practice, Terranegra di Legnago (VR), Italy
                3Department of Medical, Surgical and Health Sciences, University of Trieste, Italy
                4Department of Biomedical and Dental Sciences, Morphological and Functional Images, School of Dentistry University of Messina, Messina, Italy
                Author notes

                Guest Editor: Tolga Tozum

                Author information
                http://orcid.org/0000-0001-6359-9143
                http://orcid.org/0000-0002-9051-4413
                http://orcid.org/0000-0003-4017-4980
                Article
                10.1155/2018/9352130
                6241373
                f9b40d82-2695-47a4-9766-0e2c948fd201
                Copyright © 2018 Teresa Lombardi et al.

                This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 12 June 2018
                : 23 October 2018
                Categories
                Research Article

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