Abstract

Dental computed tomography (CT) is a diagnostic examination for the preoperative evaluation of patients who will undergo placement of oral implants. It can be performed with multidetector CT or more recently with cone-beam CT. The growing older population and the consequent development of edentulism have increased the number of imaging studies performed for preoperative evaluation of dental implantation. Thus, radiologists are becoming more frequently involved in this type of testing. Dental CT is superior to conventional x-ray techniques because superimposition and distortion are eliminated; therefore, possible complications such as injury of the neurovascular bundle and perforation of the maxillary sinuses can be avoided. This noninvasive and fast method provides accurate information about the positions of important structures to allow one to determine the implant required. Dental CT enables analysis of the state, quality, and quantity of bone on two-dimensional and three-dimensional reformatted images, and its high spatial resolution allows exact measurements of the length and width of the alveolar ridge. Inclusion of all this information in the radiology report facilitates achievement of a successful implantation.

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