Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3153533 Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery 2011 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

PurposeFull fixed dental rehabilitation, including attachment based over denture (to dental implants) is the optimal solution for edentulous patients, although the insertion of implants will be impossible when the alveolar ridge has been horizontally and severely absorbed. A full arch narrow (“knife-edge”) alveolar crest creates a “borderline” condition. Dental implants cannot be inserted into a narrow ridge, which is also at risk of rapid absorption, especially under the pressure of a full denture. Current clinical solutions have been limited. In bone augmentation, the bone absorption rate has been approximately 50%, requiring 6-month therapy prolongation for the grafted bone to consolidate.Materials and MethodsWe have described an edentulous patient whose “knife-edge” maxillary alveolar crest was widened with crest expanders (horizontal distractors).ResultsOnly 6 weeks after initiation of the distraction, a wide enough ridge had been created, allowing bilateral insertion of implants, followed by attachment-based full dental rehabilitation. Bone augmentation was avoided, and the implants were placed in the correct lateral position, with sufficient attached gingiva obtained.ConclusionsHorizontal crest expanding in narrow-alveolar edentulous patients can significantly reduce both morbidity and the therapeutic period and substantially increase the therapeutic success rate, based on both soft tissue and bone distraction. With this technique, our patient was without the denture for only 6 weeks.

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Health Sciences Medicine and Dentistry Dentistry, Oral Surgery and Medicine
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