
Navigation-Assisted Orbital Trauma Reconstruction Using a Bioactive Osteoconductive/Bioresorbable u-HA/PLLA System
Author(s) -
Takahiro Kanno,
Shintaro Sukegawa,
Masaaki Karino,
Yoshihiko Furuki
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of maxillofacial and oral surgery/journal of maxillofacial and oral surgery
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.293
H-Index - 21
eISSN - 0974-942X
pISSN - 0972-8279
DOI - 10.1007/s12663-019-01207-y
Subject(s) - orbital fracture , medicine , implant , oral and maxillofacial surgery , dentistry , facial trauma , biomedical engineering , surgery
Orbital fractures with orbital wall defects are common facial fractures encountered by oral-maxillofacial surgeons, because of the exposed position and thin bony walls of the midface. The primary goal of surgery is to restore the pre-injury anatomy and volume of hard tissue, and to free incarcerated or prolapsed orbital tissue from the fracture by bridging the bony defects with reconstructive implant material and restoring the maxillofacial-orbital skeleton. Numerous studies have reported orbital fracture repair with a wide variety of implant materials that offer various advantages and disadvantages. The ideal orbital implant material will allow conformation to individual patients' anatomical characteristics, remain stable over time, and are radiopaque, especially for the reconstruction of relatively large and/or complex bony walls. Based on these requirements, novel uncalcined and unsintered hydroxyapatite (u-HA) particles and poly-L-lactide (PLLA; u-HA/PLLA) composite sheets could be used as innovative, bioactive, and osteoconductive/bioresorbable implant materials for orbital reconstruction. In addition, intraoperative navigation is a powerful tool. Navigation- and computer-assisted surgeries have improved execution and predictability, allowing for greater precision, accuracy, and minimal invasiveness during orbital trauma reconstructive surgery of relatively complex and large orbital wall defects with ophthalmological malfunctions and deformities. This review presents an overview of navigation-assisted orbital trauma reconstruction using a bioactive, osteoconductive/bioresorbable u-HA/PLLA system.