| Literature DB >> 33028292 |
Luigi V Stefanelli1, Nicola Pranno2, Francesca De Angelis3, Silvia La Rosa4, Antonella Polimeni3, Stefano Di Carlo3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The insertion of dental implants in the atrophic posterior maxilla can be a challenge. One option is to modify the residual native bone in preparation for proper, prosthetically-driven implant placement. The procedure presented in this study is called Navigated Antral Bone Expansion (N.A.B.E). This procedure employs the use of a navigation system to plan and guide the initial pilot drilling, bone expansion, final site preparation, and implant insertion. The aim of this study was to compare the distance between the alveolar ridge and the sinus floor measured before and after the surgery performed using the N.A.B.E.Entities:
Keywords: Atrophic maxilla; Computer aided implantology; Dynamic guidance; Dynamic navigation; Sinus lift
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33028292 PMCID: PMC7542702 DOI: 10.1186/s12903-020-01268-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Oral Health ISSN: 1472-6831 Impact factor: 2.757
Fig. 1Implant planning using a STL file as reference for a prosthetic driven implant placement
Fig. 2a Jaw tracker used in the lower jaw for dynamic navigation TaP. b Head tracker used in the upper jaw for dynamic navigation TaP
Fig. 3The surgeon can verify the registration accuracy by touching the tracer’s ball tip on the patient’s high contrast landmarks from several aspects and comparing the physical location of the tip with its on-screen representation on the system’s display
Fig. 4In the first step, the pilot drill was used to make the initial osteotomy using the available residual vertical bone height in the palatal and distal position relative to the restoratively driven implant planning position
Fig. 5The bone expander is inserted in the same direction of the initial osteotomy when the last 3 mm of the working length is reached; the axis is corrected by using these last 3 mm
Fig. 6The final implant osteotomy in the correct position was performed and the implant inserted
Fig. 7The software automatically fits a model of the implant to its appearance in the post-operative image and computes the angular axis corrected between the planned and actual implant locations
Fig. 8Box plots showing the median, quartile, and minimum and maximum values of the distance between the alveolar ridge and the sinus floor (mm) measured before and after surgery . Boxes contain 50% of all values; the horizontal lines inside the boxes indicate the medians and the vertical lines extend to 1.5 of the interquartile range