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Quantitation of Mandibular Ramus Volume as a Source of Bone Grafting
Author(s) -
Verdugo Fernando,
Simonian Krikor,
McDonald Roberto Smith,
Nowzari Hessam
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
clinical implant dentistry and related research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.338
H-Index - 85
eISSN - 1708-8208
pISSN - 1523-0899
DOI - 10.1111/j.1708-8208.2009.00172.x
Subject(s) - medicine , molar , mandibular ramus , bone grafting , dentistry , volume (thermodynamics) , sinus (botany) , alveolar ridge , dental implant , nuclear medicine , implant , orthodontics , surgery , physics , botany , quantum mechanics , biology , genus
Background: When alveolar atrophy impairs dental implant placement, ridge augmentation using mandibular ramus graft may be considered. In live patients, however, an accurate calculation of the amount of bone that can be safely harvested from the ramus has not been reported. The use of a software program to perform these calculations can aid in preventing surgical complications. Purpose: The aim of the present study was to intra‐surgically quantify the volume of the ramus bone graft that can be safely harvested in live patients, and compare it to presurgical computerized tomographic calculations. Materials and Methods: The AutoCAD® software program quantified ramus bone graft in 40 consecutive patients from computerized tomographies. Direct intra‐surgical measurements were recorded thereafter and compared to software data ( n  = 10). In these 10 patients, the bone volume was also measured at the recipient sites 6 months post‐sinus augmentation. Results: The mandibular second and third molar areas provided the thickest cortical graft averaging 2.8 ± 0.6 mm. The thinnest bone was immediately posterior to the third molar (1.9 ± 0.3 mm). The volume of ramus bone graft measured by AutoCAD averaged 0.8 mL (standard deviation [SD] 0.2 mL, range: 0.4–1.2 mL). The volume of bone graft measured intra‐surgically averaged 2.5 mL (SD 0.4 mL, range: 1.8–3.0 mL). The difference between the two measurement methods was significant ( p  < 0.001). The bone volume measured 6 months post‐sinus augmentation averaged 2.2 mL (SD 0.4 mL, range: 1.6–2.8 mL) with a mean loss of 0.3 mL in volume. Conclusion: The mandibular second molar area provided the thickest cortical graft. A cortical plate of 2.8 mm in average at combined second and third molar areas provided 2.5 mL particulated volume. The use of a design software program can improve surgical treatment planning prior to ramus bone grafting. The AutoCAD software program did not overestimate the volume of bone that can be safely harvested from the mandibular ramus.

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