For decades, implantology has attracted extensive interest for restoration in patients with the defect of dentition. It has emerged as a very established prosthetic with a 5-year survival rate of 96% . However, defect of dentition resulted from jaw cyst remains an ongoing challenge for subsequent implantation treatment. Since it presents as a larger bone lesion than normal teeth extraction sockets and bone quality and quantity in teeth missing area can significantly impact dental implant failure rates . Jaw cysts are one of the most common diseases occurring in the oral and maxillofacial area, and often cause destructive bone lesions followed by specific clinical features, such as located pain, swelling and loosen teeth. Over the years, enucleation of jaw bone cysts has been the standard method of management of jaw cysts because its conservational protocol to remove the lesion thoroughly and reserve important structures and functions. Unfortunately, management of the residual bony cavity remains as a huge dilemma whether to filing the defect with additional material. Clot formation in the first instance is the conventional option for residual cavity recovery. Iodoform sponges are traditionally used in cysts as stuffing material for inflammation preventative purpose, however, it cannot help with the following bone formation. Without any bone filling material, researches revealed that spontaneous bone healing index can be from 25.85% to 76% and from 43.46% to 81.03% after 6 and 12 months post-operative respectively. These ranged results indicated that spontaneous bone healing is not efficient enough especially for patients with the extraction of relevant teeth who may process a subsequent surgery for implantation. As an alternative to this, bone graft material in the surgery has gained increasing attention. Autogenous bone, artificial bone substitutes and mix of them are widely applied to achieve higher bone regeneration. Thereby an alternative surgical procedure should be considered for patients at risk of missing teeth because of jaw cysts. Whether bone graft material could make a remarkable improvement of bone regeneration after cyst enucleation and would this actually benefit the follow-up implantation? Answers are urged to be delivered. Based on the published data, few studies have yielded in the bone healing comparison of spontaneous bone healing and xenograft in jaw cysts. Besides, with the development of medical radiograph, three-dimensional images have played a more important role in the clinic. Whereas, to our knowledge, most researches had adopted two-dimensional radiograph for measurement, such as panoramic radiographs rather than three dimensions. Therefore, we conducted a prospective study to evaluate the shrinkage rate in cyst patients with different extra xenograft (Bio-Oss and collagen sponge). Cone beam computed tomography (CBCT) and three-dimensional model reconstruction were recommended for radiographic and digital analyzation. In summary, this study was aimed to evaluate bone volume augmentation after jaw cyst enucleation with different bone substitutes filling by CBCT and to analyze other influence factors for bone formation as well.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
80
The bone cavity will be filled with collagen sponge.
The bone cavity will be applied with guided bone regeneration with deproteinized bovine substitute (DBBM, Bio-Oss®, granulometry 0.25-1 mm; Geistlich Pharma AG) and absorbable collagen membrane (Bio-Gide®, Geistlich Pharma AG) .
The bone cavity will be applied with guided bone regeneration with collagen sponge and deproteinized bovine substitute (DBBM, Bio-Oss®, granulometry 0.25-1 mm; Geistlich Pharma AG) and absorbable collagen membrane (Bio-Gide®, Geistlich Pharma AG) .
Stomatology Hospital, Zhejiang University School of Medicine
Hangzhou, Zhejiang, China
RECRUITINGShrinkage rate of residual bone cavity
(pre-operative cyst volume - 3 / 6 months post-operative defect volume) / pre-operative cyst volume × 100%.
Time frame: 3 months
Shrinkage rate of residual bone cavity
(pre-operative cyst volume - 3 / 6 months post-operative defect volume) / pre-operative cyst volume × 100%.
Time frame: 6 months
Bone density
HU value of newly-formed bone
Time frame: 3 months
Bone density
HU value of newly-formed bone
Time frame: 6 months
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