| Literature DB >> 30464184 |
Yoshio Otake1, Megumi Nakamura2, Akiko Henmi3, Tetsu Takahashi1, Yasuyuki Sasano3.
Abstract
Piezosurgery is an innovative technique widely used for osteotomies in the field of oral and maxillofacial surgery. The surgical technique has been clinically supposed to cut mineralized bone selectively with reducing the risk of damage to adjacent soft tissues. However, none of the previous literature has reported any evidence of scientific experiments to examine performance of the piezoelectric device, i.e. the time required for cutting bone and the effect on soft tissues under the standardized conditions. This study was designed to test the hypothesis that cutting time of the piezoelectric device is longer than that of rotary instruments while the cut surface of bone is smoother and soft tissues are less damaged with piezosurgery under the standardized experimental system. We measured the time for cutting bone and soft tissues of rats with the piezoelectric device and rotary instruments. Damage to soft tissues was examined histologically, and the cut surface of bone was investigated using scanning electron microscopy. Our study demonstrated experimentally that piezosurgery provides a smooth cut bony surface with no damage to soft tissues and takes longer time to cut bone than conventional drillings. We propose that piezosurgery is beneficial for medical safety and usability.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30464184 PMCID: PMC6249262 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-35295-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Measurement of the time required for cutting the tibia and tongue. (a–d) Force-time graph of tibias: (a) Carbide bur, (b) Fissure bur, (c) Round bur, and (d) Piezosurgery. (e–h) Force-time graph of tongues: (e) Carbide bur, (f) Fissure bur, (g) Round bur, and (h) Piezosurgery. (i) Comparison of time required to cut the tibia among the instruments (n = 6; Games-Howell test, P < 0.05). Carbide and fissure burs (P = 0.001), carbide and round burs (P = 0.002), fissure and round burs (P = 0.003), fissure bur and piezosurgery (P = 0.002), round bur and piezosurgery (P = 0.003). (j) Comparison of time required to cut the tongue among the instruments (n = 6; Games-Howell test, P < 0.05). Carbide and fissure burs (P = 0.454), carbide and round burs (P < 0.001), fissure and round burs (P < 0.001). The result for piezosurgery was not shown because the tongue was not cut within 20 s.
Time required for cutting the tibia and tongue (n = 6).
| Carbide | Fissure | Round | Piezosurgery | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tibia | Time(sec) | 4.44 | 7.86 | 30.15 | 204.01 |
| 3.02 | 6.15 | 23.76 | 202.06 | ||
| 4.56 | 6.87 | 45.1 | 345.8 | ||
| 3.42 | 7.76 | 39.74 | 139.65 | ||
| 3.99 | 9.71 | 24.28 | 238.57 | ||
| 4.18 | 8.99 | 31.62 | 220.29 | ||
| Mean | 3.94 | 7.89 | 32.44 | 225.06 | |
| SD | 0.6 | 1.31 | 8.5 | 67.9 | |
| Tongue | Time(sec) | 1.53 | 1.34 | 7.37 | * |
| 1.19 | 1.04 | 8.34 | * | ||
| 1.45 | 0.96 | 9.98 | * | ||
| 1.38 | 0.85 | 5.77 | * | ||
| 0.93 | 1.01 | 6.04 | * | ||
| 0.77 | 0.98 | 7.81 | * | ||
| Mean | 1.21 | 1.03 | 7.55 | — | |
| SD | 0.3 | 0.17 | 1.55 | — | |
*Time for piezosurgery was not shown because the tongue was not cut within 20 seconds.
Figure 2Histology of the region of the tongue to which each instrument was applied (H-E staining, scale bar = 200 μm). (a) Carbide bur, (b) Fissure bur, (c) Round bur, and (d) Piezosurgery. The damage caused by the conventional drillings extends from mucous epithelia through submucous and muscular layers. Piezosurgery made a dent but did not damage any tissue.
Figure 3SEM images of the tibia to which each instrument was applied. (a) Carbide bur, (b) Fissure bur, (c) Round bur, and (d) Piezosurgery. The smooth surface without damage was made by piezosurgery, while conventional drillings caused the rough surfaces.