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Efficacy of Bone Substitute Material in Preserving Volume when Placing a Maxillary Immediate Complete Denture: Study Protocol for the PANORAMIX Randomized Controlled Trial

Overview
Journal Trials
Publisher Biomed Central
Date 2016 May 22
PMID 27206923
Citations 1
Authors
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Abstract

Background: Bone preservation is an essential issue in the context of last teeth extraction and complete edentulism. The intended treatment, whether a complete denture or an implant placement, is facilitated with a voluminous residual ridge. Bone resorption after multiple extractions has not been as well studied as the bone resorption that occurs after the extraction of a single tooth. Recent advances in bone substitute materials have revived this issue. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the interest in using bone substitute material to fill the socket after last teeth extraction in a maxillary immediate complete denture procedure compared with the conventional protocol without socket filling.

Methods/design: A randomized, controlled, clinical trial was designed. The 34 participants eligible for maxillary immediate complete denture were divided into two groups. Complete dentures were prepared despite persistence of the last anterior teeth. The control group received a conventional treatment including denture placement immediately after extractions. In the experimental group, in addition to the immediate denture placement, a xenograft bone-substitute material (Bio-Oss Collagen®) was placed in the fresh sockets. The primary outcome of the study is to compare mean bone ridge height loss 1 year after maxillary immediate complete denture placement, with or without bone-substitute material, in incisor and canine sockets. The secondary outcomes are to compare the average bone ridge height and width loss for each extraction site. An original quantitative evaluation method using cone beam computed tomography was designed for reproducible measurements, with a radio-opaque denture duplicate. Two independent operators perform the radiologic measurements.

Discussion: The immediate complete denture technique limits bone resorption in multiple extraction situations and thus allows better denture retention and better options for implant placement. To compare the benefit of using any bone socket-filling material, we proposed a quantitative evaluation protocol of resorption in the specific case of the last anterior maxillary teeth extraction with immediate denture placement.

Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT02120053 . Registered on 18 April 2014.

Citing Articles

Evaluation of Implant Placement Risk Levels in Partially Edentulous Patients Using Cone Beam Computed Tomography.

Borzangy S, Alqutaibi A, Krsoum M, Aljohani R, Qadri O Cureus. 2023; 15(10):e47893.

PMID: 38034143 PMC: 10682683. DOI: 10.7759/cureus.47893.

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