The minimization of morbidity in cranio-maxillofacial osseous reconstruction
Bone graft harvesting and coral-derived granules as a bone graft substitute
George Kálmán Béla Sándor
Lääketieteellinen tiedekunta, Hammaslääketieteen laitos, Suu- ja leukakirurgia, Oulun yliopisto
Lääketieteellinen tiedekunta, Hammas- ja suukirurgian osasto, Oulun yliopisto
Academic Dissertation to be presented with the assent of the Faculty of Medicine, University of Oulu, for public discussion in the Auditorium of the Institute of Dentistry, on April 25th, 2003, at 12 noon.
Copyright © 2003
Oulun yliopisto
Esitarkastajat
Professori Lars Andersson
Professori T. Sam Lindholm
OULUN YLIOPISTO, OULU 2003
ISBN 951-42-6964-0 (PDF)
ISSN 1796-2234 (Online)
URN:ISBN:9514269640
Abstract
Reduction of morbidity in osseous reconstruction of cranio-maxillofacial bony defects could come from development of less invasive bone graft harvesting techniques or by elimination of bone graft donor sites using a bone graft substitute. This work studies outcomes and morbidity associated with these two approaches.
A power-driven trephine was used to harvest bone from the anterior iliac crest using a minimally invasive surgical technique. Initially the safety of the technique was evaluated in a cadaver model. Twenty-five freshly preserved adult cadavers had a total of 250 cancellous cores of bone harvested from 50 anterior iliac crest sites. Twenty intentional perforations were made to the maximum depth possible with the instrumentation tested. No encroachment upon the peritoneum was found.
A total of 84 patients had 333 cores of cancellous bone harvested using the same approach with a complication rate of 3.6% and a patient satisfaction rate of 98.8%. In a further 76 patients the motorized trephine method was compared to traditional open iliac crest corticocancellous block harvesting. The trephine group ambulated earlier, required fewer days of hospital stay and had significantly lower pain scores than the open iliac crest group.
Coral-derived granules were used as a xenograft bone graft substitute to treat bony defects in the cranio-maxillofacial skeletons of 36 patients with 54 sites and followed for 12 to 36 months. The augmentations produced satisfactory results with the following complications noted: overt wound infection 1.8%, wound irritation 3.8% and clinically evident resorption in 9.3% of augmented sites.
Coral-derived granules were then used to treat 48 dento-alveolar defects in 21 growing patients with trauma induced tooth-loss in the anterior maxilla and elective ankylosed tooth removal in the posterior maxilla and mandible. Coral granules were significantly more efficacious in reconstructing alveolar defects in the posterior maxilla or mandible (93.5%), than the anterior maxilla (17.6%).
The minimally invasive technique using a power driven trephine was successful at reducing morbidity from bone graft harvesting at the anterior iliac crest. Coral-derived granules can be used in selected situations as a bone graft substitute and minimize post surgical morbidity by eliminating the bone graft donor site.
Asiasanat: anterior iliac crest, autogenous bone grafts, bone graft substitutes, trephine
Julkaistu painettuna:
![]() | Acta Universitatis Ouluensis Medica D 715 ISBN 951-42-6963-2 ISSN 0355-3221 |
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