Title: Subantral Option 1 : Conventional Implant Placement
1MAXILLARY SINUS AUGMENTATION
2- Maxilla is 35 times more edentulous than mandible
- Maxillary sinus continues pneumatization
throughout life. - The available bone is lost from the inferior
expansion of the sinus after tooth loss,
involving the residual ridge region - The bone density in this region is also decreases
rapidly an on average is the least dense of any
oral region
3Neurovascular supply
- Blood supply is mainly derived from nose
- Sphenopalatine artery
- Anterior posterior nasal artery
- Infraorbital artery
- Posterior middle superior alveolar artery
- Facial artery
- Palatine artery
4- Venous drainage
- Anterior facial vein
- Pterygoid veinous plexus
- Lymphatic drainage
- Submandibular lymphnode
- Nerve supply
- Maxillary division of trigeminal nerve (V2)
5Maxillary Sinus Anatomy
- Pyramidal shape
- Roof floor of orbit
- Floor alveolar bone and
palatine process - Anterior wall facial surface of
maxilla - Posterior wall infratemporal
surface - Medial wall lateral wall of
nasal cavity
6Sinus membrane
- Schneiderian membrane
- Mucoperiosteum cansists 3 layers
- 1.Epithelium lining pseudostratified columnar
ciliated epithelium - 2.Lamina propria can stripped easily
from - 3.periosteum underlying bone
- There are numerous globlet cell
- Most of the serous and mucous glands found in the
lining are located near the maxillary ostium
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8- The maxillary ostium
opening in the medial wall
and near the superior
aspect of the sinus - The cilia beat toward the
ostium at 15 cycles/minute - Adequate manipulation of the membrane and
placement of graft material are possible without
impeding the drainage of the sinus
9Treatment planning for edentulous posterior
maxilla
10Patient evaluation
- The SA-2 to SA-4 surgical procedures the sinus
should be free of infection - In addition, a thorough history and clinical
evaluation of the maxillary sinus are conducted. - Potential infection in the region of the sinuses
may result in extremely severe complication
11- Physical examination
- Radiography
- Conventional OPG, waters view
- CT
- MRI
- CT is currently the modality of choice
- Any sign of acute sinusitis, root tips, cysts or
tumors complicate the procedure and mandate
further evaluation - Known diseases of the antrum should be treated
before sinus grafts
12Premedications
13Surgical technique
- Patient sedation, local anesthesia, and
preparation of an aseptic environment - Antiseptic mouth rinse Chlorhexidine scrub and
rinse may be used - Iodophor compounds ( Betadine ) are a most
effective antiseptic, but inhibit the
osteoinduction of demineralized bone
14- Regional anesthesia
- Blocking maxillary nerve (v2 ) 1.8 ml
- Hemimaxilla, side of nose, cheek, lip, sinus area
- Long-acting anesthetic Bupivacaine 0.5 or
Etidocaine 1.5 with EPI 1200,000 - Local infiltration
- Labial mucosa and palatal region
- Complete hemostasis
- Lidocaine 2 with EPI 1100,000
15Bone density classification
- 1. dense compact (D-1) bone
- 2. dense to thick porous compact and coarse
trabecular (D-2) bone - 3. porous compact and fine trabecular
(D-3) bone - 4. fine trabecular (D-4) bone
16Division of available bone
17Subantral Option 1 Conventional Implant
Placement
- Height gt 12 mm.
- An improved compressive thread design implant (4
mm. diameter) implants may accommodate - 11 mm. of bone height in D2,
- 12 mm. in D3,
- 13 mm. in D4
- In division A, root form implants are placed for
prosthetic support - Division B bone, osteoplasty or augmentation to
increase the width to Division A
18- Then reevaluated to determine the proper
treatment plan classification - Remain 1-2 mm. short of the sinus floor is not
indicated in the posterior maxilla - Endosteal implantation in the SA-1 category are
left to heal in a nonfunctional environment for
approximately 4 to 8 months before the abutment
posts are added for prosthodontic reconstruction
19Subantral Option 2 Sinus lift and Simultaneous
Implant Placement
- Height 10 12 mm.
- When the available bone is 0 to 2 mm.
Insufficient in length for ideal implant length - Incision and Reflection
- A full thickness incision is made on the crest of
the ridge from the tuberosity to the distal of
the canine region and vertical incision 5 mm.
20- Osteotomy and Sinus lift ( SA-2 )
- The depth of the osteotomy is approximately 1 to
2 mm. short of the floor of the antrum - Reduced speed of the hand piece ( slower than
1000 rpm ) enhances the tactile sense and feel
the cortical plate of the antral floor
21- The osteotome is inserted and tapped firmly into
final position up to 2 mm. - The apical portion of the implant engages the
cortical floor, with bone over the apex, and an
intact sinus membrane
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23- The patients prosthodontic treatment is similar
to that in the SA-1 category - The implant body should not have an apical hole,
which also may fill with mucous and be a source
of further sinus infections
24Subantral Option 3 Sinus graft with delayed
endosteal implant placement
- Height 5 10 mm.
- Incision line and reflection
- Awareness of the greater palatal artery, in the
severe atrophic maxilla - A relief incision enhance access and vision
- Aggressive reflection of the flap may cause
damage to infraorbital nerve
25- Access window
- 6 round diamond bur
- Copious sterile saline
- The outline is scored on the bone with a rotary
instrument
26- The corners of the access window are usually
round - paintbrush stroke approach until a bluish hue or
hemorrhage from the site is observed - A flat-ended metal punch or mirror handle and
mallet are used to gently separate the lateral
window from the surrounding bone, while still
attached to the thin sinus membrane
27- A soft tissue curette is introduced along the
margin of the window - The curette is never blindly placed into the
access window - The periosteal elevators and curettes further
reflect the membrane off, to a height of at least
16 mm from the crest of the ridge
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30Sinus graft materials
- Several graft materials have been studied
- Autogenous bone any debris from implant
osteotomies, the tuberosity region, exostoses,
cores from the symphysis or ramus region - Demineralized freeze-dried bone (DFDB)
- Beta tricalcium phosphate
- Xenograft hydroxyapatite
- Combinations
31A layered-type graft
- 1. dense HA antibiotic
- 2. cacium phosphate (usually xenograft
microporous HA such as Osteograft N-300 or
Bio-Oss) DFDB PRP from whole blood
antibiotic - 3. autogenous bone
32- Graft materials not mixed with blood or
anesthetic solution - The toxic byproducts of blood catabolism and the
acidic pH of anesthetic both may decrease bone
formation - A resorbable membrane may be placed over the
lateral access window
33- The 5 to 8 mm of initial bone height may
stabilize the implant and permit its rigid
fixation - An endosteal implant may be inserted at this
appointment
34- Several advantages tend toward the decision to
delay implant placement for approximately 4
months - Disadvantage of delaying the implant placement is
the need for an additional surgery - The implant may be inserted after 2 months yet
reducing considerably the risk of infection
35- Primary closure using interrupted horizontal
mattress or a continuous suture - Sinus incision line opening may contribute to
infection, contamination, or loss of graft
materials
36- Healing for implants placed into sinus grafts
- The main variables appear to be the time healing
- The volume of the subantral graft
- The distance from the lateral to medial wall
- The amount of autologous bone
- The health status of the patient Diabetics,
postmenopausal women - All of which relate to the amount of new bone
formation
37- Autogenous bone (4-6 months)
- Autogenous bone porous HA DFDB (6-10 months)
- Alloplasts only as tricalcium phosphate (24
months)
38Subantral Option 4 Sinus graft and extended
delay of endosteal implant placement
- Height lt 5 mm
- There for the fewer bony walls, less favorable
vascular bed, minimal local autologous bone, and
larger graft volume - Sinus graft is performed as in the previous SA-3
procedure
39- Additional bone harvest site is usually required
ascending ramus of mandible - The implant does offer an advantage if coated
with HA - The time interval for rigid osseous fixation is
dependent on the density of bone
40Postoperative instructions
- Do not
- blow your nose
- Tobacco use
- Drinking with straw
- lift or pull on lip to look at sutures
- Sneezing with closed mouth
- Take your medication as directed
- Aware of small granules in your mouth
41- Notify the office if
- You feel granules in your nose
- Your medications do not relieve your discomfort
42Perioperative complications
- Window
- Bleeding bone wax, electrocautery
- Septum make two windows seperated by septum
- Perforation repair after membrane elevation
43- Membrane
- Perforation repair
- Small collagen membrane (Collatape)
- Large slow resorbable membrane (Biomend)
- Thick
- Polyp curette out
- Mucocele drain
- Delay sinus graft
44Possible Complication - Small Perforation
45Possible Complication - Large Perforation
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47Postoperative complicationShort-term
complications
- Incision line opening assess need to restore
- Bleeding (from nose) do not blow nose, do not
lower head - Graft escape through perforation, assess amount
swelling/infection - Antibiotic oral, IV
- Drain, remove graft
- Assess progression culture and sensitivity test
anaerobes/aerobes - Reassess antibiotic choice
- Refer
48Suggest pharmacologic protocal for sinus graft
infection
- Amoxicillin 2 g stat, 500 mg qid
- Metronidazole 500 mg stat, 250 mg tid
- or
- Clindamycin 300 mg stat, 150 mg qid
49Reference
- Misch CE. Contemporary implant dentistry. Mosby
1999. - Spiekermann H. Color atlas of dental medicine
implantology, Thieme 1995. - ?????????????????????????? ???????????????? ???
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50Special thanks
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