Abstract

Edentulism and terminal dentition are still considered significant problems in the dental field, posing a great challenge for surgical and restorative solutions especially with immediate loading protocols. When the implant placement is planned immediately after extraction with irregular bone topography or there is an un-leveled alveolar ridge topography for any other reason, bone reduction may be required to level the alveolar crest in order to create the desired bone architecture allowing for sufficient bone width for implant placement and to insure adequate inter-arch restorative space. Bone reduction protocols exist in analog and digitally planned methodologies, with or without surgical guides to achieve the desired bone level based upon the desired position of the implants with regard to the restorative outcome. The objective of this paper was to scrutinize the literature regarding the practice of bone reduction in conjunction with implant placement, and to review different types of bone reduction surgical guides. Results: The literature reveals different protocols that provide for bone reduction with a variety of bone reduction methods. The digitally-planned surgical guide based on Cone-Beam computerized tomography (CBCT) scan reconstructed data can improve accuracy, reduce surgical time, and deliver the desired bone level for the implant placement with fewer surgical and restorative complications. The clinician’s choice is based on personal experience, training, and comfort with a specific guide type. Conclusions: Bone reduction, when required, is an indispensable step in the surgical procedure to attain suitable width of bone in anticipation of implant placement ideally determined by the desired tooth position and required restorative space based on material selection for the chosen framework design, i.e., hybrid, monolithic zirconia. Additionally, bone reduction and implant placement can be accomplished in the same surgical procedure, minimizing trauma and the need for two separate interventions.

Highlights

  • Edentulism is still considered one of the worldwide most public health significant problems, improvement in preventive dentistry [1]

  • Bone reduction is essential to level the bone to gain adequate width for implant placement with enough vertical restorative space to fabricate the prosthetic for implant placement with enough vertical restorative space to fabricate the prosthetic reconstruction at the correct vertical dimension of occlusion (VDO) [25,26,27]

  • It can be concluded that ever since implant therapy became a common procedure in patients with terminal dentition or edentulism, bone reduction procedures became an established treatment option and an indispensable step in the surgical procedure to attain suitable bone level for implant placement and increased available inter-arch space for adequate restoration

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Summary

Introduction

Edentulism is still considered one of the worldwide most public health significant problems, improvement in preventive dentistry [1]. Patients with a terminal dentition are posing a unique challenge for surgical and restorative solutions, when the treatment plan includes immediate placement of implants after tooth extraction [3,4]. The traditional protocol for terminal dentition was to extract teeth first and allow sufficient time (in months) for the bone ridge to heal before implant placement would be considered. The patient received an immediate complete denture until the bone had matured enough for implant placement [3]. Implant-supported provisional prostheses after immediate loading, remarkably improved the life quality of edentulous patients and were associated with a greater satisfaction of patients in regards to comfort, functionality, phonetics and esthetics [1,5]

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