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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Functional Rehabilitation of Mandibular Continuity Defects Using Autologous Bone and Dental Implants – Prognostic Value of Bone Origin, Radiation Therapy and Implant Dimensions
K. A. GrötzM. O. KleinChristian WalterBilal Al-nawasW. WagnerJ. Wegenersubject
MaleDental Restoration Failuremedicine.medical_treatmentDentistryKaplan-Meier EstimateMandibleTransplantation Autologousstomatognathic systemHumansMedicineDental Restoration FailureRetrospective StudiesFunctional rehabilitationBone TransplantationRehabilitationbusiness.industryRetrospective cohort studyMiddle AgedAutologous bonehumanitiesbody regionsTransplantationRadiation therapyDental Implantationstomatognathic diseasesCarcinoma Squamous CellFemaleMouth NeoplasmsSurgeryImplantbusinessdescription
<i>Aim:</i> The aim of this retrospective study was to investigate prognostic parameters for the rehabilitation of mandibular continuity defects with free autologous bone and dental implants for patients after intraoral squamous cell carcinoma. <i>Methods:</i> Following potential prognostic factors for implant survival were analyzed: bony bed (local bone versus augmented iliac crest bone), radiation dose (no radiation, <50 Gy, ≥50 Gy) and implant dimensions. Kaplan-Meier survival estimates of the inserted implants were performed. <i>Results:</i> After 5 years, the cumulative survival rate of all investigated implants was 82.6%. Dental implantation into augmented bone resulted in a significantly lower survival rate (78.4%), compared to original local bone (92.8%). Modifications of implant dimensions as well as radiation therapy showed no significant impact on implant survival. <i>Conclusion:</i> For the investigated compromised collective, our results reveal a satisfactory long-term survival rate of dental implants even in augmented bone and underline the value of dental implantation for the functional rehabilitation of cancer patients.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2008-12-04 | European Surgical Research |