Edentulism is often associated with a negative psychosocial impact. The concept of prosthetic rehabilitation in which a prosthesis is supported by osseointegrated implants, was first introduced in the late 1960s by Brånemark et al. and offers an interesting alternative to removable prosthesis. However, for patients with a severely atrophic maxilla or mandible, cranial bone grafting of the jaw is required to increase bone width and height necessary for implant insertion. An active collaboration between the surgeons from the Oral and Maxillofacial Department and the prosthodontist from the Department of Dentistry has been established for continuous quality improvement of the concept of (immediate/delayed) implant loading in patients requiring cranial bone grafts to augment their severely atrophic jawbone. The investigators aim to develop a prospective database registering (immediate/delayed) implant loading data of all patients eligible according to the protocol. Patient demographics, surgical, dental, prosthetic and patient satisfaction parameters are collected during consecutive visits within the framework of routine practice. Development of a database registering immediate functional loading data secondary to cranial bone-grafting of a severely atrophic jaw, will provide more information about potential patient, surgical and prosthetic factors influencing long-term biological and mechanical stability, as well as patient satisfaction. Moreover, registration of those results could function as a measurement of quality of care, and could be used for sample size calculation for future large prospective trials.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
120
Araceli Diez-Fraile
Bruges, Other (Non U.s.), Belgium
IPI survival rate at time of immediate loading in patients with cranial bone-grafted severely atrophic jaw
Time frame: within 6 months postsurgery
definitive implant survival rate in patients with cranial bone-grafted severely atrophic jaw
Time frame: within 12 months postoperative
bone-graft resorption, as evaluated through cone-beam computed tomography
Time frame: within 12 months postoperative
prosthesis survival rate
Time frame: until a maximum of 10 years follow-up
bone-graft resorption, as evaluated through cone-beam computed tomography
Time frame: until a maximum of 10 years follow-up
Prevalence of patients with severely atrophic jaw requiring cranial bone-grafting
Time frame: every 12 months, until a maximum of ten years
Potential biologic or mechanical risk factors that could predict undesirable functional or aesthetic outcome, through regression analysis
Time frame: within 12 months postsurgery
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