| Literature DB >> 34943585 |
Rafif Alshenaiber1,2, Callum Cowan1, Craig Barclay3, Nikolaos Silikas1.
Abstract
A convenience sample of 154 edentulous patients referred for implant provision at a Regional National Health Service Dental Hospital in the North West of England were identified. The cephalometric radiographs that were taken as part of the patient baseline investigation were assessed. Digital tracing was used to measure the anterior maxillary and mandibular bone height and ridge angle with respect to the maxillary and mandibular planes. The mean height of the bone in the maxilla was found to be 14 mm, and the mean ridge angle for the anterior maxillary residual ridge is 104°. The mean height of bone in the mandible was 18 mm, while the mean ridge angle for the anterior mandibular residual ridge was 77°. Using the Cawood and Howell classification demonstrated that class VI mandibles were the most common. The cross-sectional shape of the mandible varied, with the triangular shape most common. Although there was adequate bone stock for implant placement in these cases, the mandibular residual ridge resorption presents a lingual inclination to the residual bone. The limited residual ridge position and inclination would dictate that conventional implant placement could be challenging.Entities:
Keywords: edentulous; lateral cephalometric radiograph; mandible; maxilla; residual ridge; resorption
Year: 2021 PMID: 34943585 PMCID: PMC8700105 DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics11122348
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diagnostics (Basel) ISSN: 2075-4418
Landmarks added by using the lateral cephalometric dentate tracing as guidance.
| Tracing Lines | Reference |
|---|---|
| A line bisecting the maxillary residual ridge crest which represent the highest midline point of the anterior maxillary ridge; this mimics taxis of the maxillary incisor (UInc) in dentate subjects. | This line is the preferable maxillary implant position. |
| Maxillary mid-ridge inclination which represents the angle between the maxillary plane (MxPl) and the line bisecting the maxillary residual ridge. | The maxillary incisal inclination in dentate tracing. |
| A line bisecting the mandibular residual ridge which represent the midline point on the anterior mandibular ridge; this mimics the axis of the mandibular incisor (LInc) in dentate subjects. | This line is the preferable mandibular implant position |
| Mandibular mid-ridge inclination which represents the angle between the mandibular plane (MnPl) and the line bisecting the mandibular residual ridge. | The mandibular incisal inclination in dentate tracing. |
Figure 1Tracing template used in this study: the red line in the maxillae connecting the anterior and posterior nasal spine (ANS-PNS line) represents the maxillary plane reference (MxPl); the red line in the mandible connecting the menton and the gonion (Me-Go line) represents the mandibular plane reference (MnPl); the yellow line in the maxillae is the line bisecting the maxillary residual ridge; the yellow line in the mandible is the line bisecting the mandibular residual ridge. The angles in green represent the maxillary and the mandibular incisal inclination adopted from dentate tracing.
Figure 2The red lines represent the height of the anterior part of maxillary (top) and mandibular arches (bottom).
The intra-examiner agreement for all landmarks and references.
| Landmarks and References | Mean Kappa Value |
|---|---|
| The mean length of the anterior residual ridges of the maxilla | 0.89 |
| The mean length of the anterior residual ridges of the mandible | 0.98 |
| The mean implant angle of placement for the anterior residual ridge of the maxilla | 0.88 |
| The mean implant angle of placement for the anterior residual ridge of the mandible | 0.92 |
Figure 3Diagrammatic summary of the Cawood and Howell Classification for the Maxilla (above) and the Mandible (below).
Percentage and number of cases in each subgroup of the Cawood and Howell Classification.
| Class II | Class III | Class IV | Class V | Class VI | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 14.4% | 7.5% | 20.5% | 29.5% | 28.1% |
|
| 5.9% | 0.7% | 5.9% | 13.8% | 73.7% |
The mean inclination angle of the anterior residual ridges with the mean correction angles and standard deviations.
| Mean Inclination Angle for the Anterior Residual Ridge | Standard Deviation | |
|---|---|---|
|
| 104.26° | 7.65 |
|
| 77.46° | 9.11 |
Figure 4The distinctive shapes of the cross-sectional view of the anterior edentulous mandible; (a): triangular shape, (b): lingually inclined oval shape and (c): Inverted C shape.
The percentages of each cross-sectional shape within Cawood and Howell classification.
| Class II | Class III | Class IV | Class V | Class VI | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 11.8% | 1.5% | 11.8% | 23.5% | 51.4% |
|
| 1.7% | 0% | 1.7% | 5.2% | 91.4% |
|
| 0% | 0% | 0% | 7.7% | 92.3% |