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Horizontal Ridge Augmentation Using a Xenograft Bone Substitute for Implant‐Supported Fixed Rehabilitation: A Case Report with Four Years of Follow‐Up

Bruno Freitas Mello, Márcio de Carvalho Formiga, Luiz Fernando de Souza da Silva, Gustavo dos Santos Coura, Jamil Awad Shibli

2020Case Reports in Dentistry16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The guided bone regeneration (GBR) technique has been used to achieve optimal bone volume augmentation and allow dental implant placement in atrophic maxilla and mandible, with predictable results and high survival rates. The use of bone substitutes has reduced the necessity of autogenous bone grafts, reducing the morbidity at the donor areas and thus improving the patients' satisfaction and comfort. This clinical case report shows a clinical and histological evaluation of the bone tissue behavior, in a case that required the horizontal augmentation of the alveolar ridge, with the use of xenograft biomaterial and further dental implant placement. After six months of healing time, six implants were placed, and a bone biopsy was done. The histological analysis depicted some fragments of the xenograft bone graft, integrated with the new-formed bone tissue.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineDentistryMandible (arthropod mouthpart)ImplantAlveolar ridgeMaxillaDental implantSurgeryGenusBotanyBiologyDental Implant Techniques and OutcomesPeriodontal Regeneration and TreatmentsBone Tissue Engineering Materials
Horizontal Ridge Augmentation Using a Xenograft Bone Substitute for Implant‐Supported Fixed Rehabilitation: A Case Report with Four Years of Follow‐Up | Litcius