Thursday, February 18, 2016

 Edentulous Mandible: Implant – Retained Overdenture

Overdentures get support and retention from a superstructure attached to the implants. This superstructure defines the character of the denture that can be provided. We differentiate between tissue-supported, tissue/implant-supported, and mainly implant-supported overdentures.

In tissue-supported overdentures, the retentive mechanism of choice is a magnet, a ball attachment, a locator attachment, or a conical crown. Tissue/implant-supported overdentures get their retention via a superstructure consisting of two implants interconnected by a bar attached to gold caps that in turn are screwed onto the implants.

 Implant-supported overdentures rest primarily superstructure connected to the implants. The superstructure is placed on at least four implants, to interconnect them.

Patients with an edentulous mandible may experience problems with conventional dentures, such as a lack of retention and problems concerning self-esteem. Any fixed dental prosthesis on implants or implant-supported overdenture increases patient satisfaction.

Furthermore, research has shown that a one-phase implant insertion technique can achieve the same good results as a two-phase technique. This would mean that one-phase technique is more patient-friendly, because a second surgical stage is no longer required.

SURGICAL GUIDE

 A surgical guide to the edentulous mandible can be based on an existing functional denture or on a wax-up of the new dental prosthesis in the correct maxillomandible relationship in an articulator. Implants in the edentulous mandible intended to supporting an overdenture are inserted between the two mental foramina. 

They should be equidistant from the midline, and the inter-implant distance should be between 15 to 20 mm. When inserting four implants, the most distal one must be placed about 5mm mesially of the mental foramina.

TWO UNSPLINTED IMPLANTS AND AN OVERDENTURE
Two implants with ball and clip attachments should be adequate where the mandible has the height of at least 10 mm and a patient requests more stability and retention for complete denture. Two implants with ball attachments, Locater abutments, magnets or telescopic crown are most often used when the patient’s oral hygiene is a problem. 

An insufficient vertical dimension or a tapered shape alveolar ridge would lead to a bar design covering the frenulum of the tongue, thus impairing the function.

TWO SPLINTED IMPLANTS AND AN OVERDENTURE

With two implants interconnected by a bar as a treatment option, the implants are frequently placed at or mesially of the position of the canine teeth. The bar should be placed directly below the incisal edges of the lower teeth. 

This reduces the tendency of the mandibular denture to rotate around the fulcrum created between the two abutments. With a bar and clip on two implants, it is advisable not to use a round bar, since this facilitate denture rotation.

Benefits: Higher stability and retention of the overdenture
Limitation: Not applicable in the V-profile mandibles and where the residual height of the mandible is less than 10 mm. Oral hygiene is more demanding.

FOUR (OR MORE) SPLINTED IMPLANTS AND AN OVERDENTURE  

Four implants and a bar and clip mesostructure are advisable when the alveolar bone height is less than 10 mm, since the bone-to-implant surface area becomes relatively limited when shorter implants are inserted. Four interconnected implants should also be inserted if the opposing jaw has (Partial) natural dentition.

FIXED DENTAL PROSTHESIS IN THE EDENTULOUS MANDIBLE
As a patient cannot remove the FDP, oral hygiene is important. Not all edentulous patients can be considered good candidates for FDP’s as they are not capable of their oral hygiene.

An FDP can only be considered if sufficient lip support can be provided. Diagnosis treatment planning, Crossbites, maxillomandibular relations , intermaxillary space, and so on must analyzed properly. As Prosthodontics dictates the amount, site, and type of implant, a mockup is essential.






For further information join the next batch of Comprehensive Implant Training in India: www.sachdevadentalcare.com or www.dentalcoursesdelhi.com
Regards : Dr.Prof .Rajat Sachdeva
+919818894041,01142464041


Ridge Splitting in implantology

Ridge splitting for lateral ridge augmentation
     An alternative method of augmenting a narrow ridge is by ridge splitting instead of onlay grafting. This technique can be applied in selected cases. It requires that the alveolar ridge has two cortical plates separated by a layer of cancellous bone in a preoperative CBCT image. This situation is normally confined to alveolar ridges featuring an orofacial thickness of more than 4mm.

Ridge splitting can be performed simultaneously with implant placement. This is the only way to obtain primary stability in this scenario is by engaging the bone at the apical region of the implant. In selected cases, it may be possible to stabilize the mobilized buccal plate with bone screws if required.

It is advisable to perform the splitting with minimal flap reflection to expose only the crestal region of the ridge. A somewhat higher level of surgical skill and experience is needed for flapless ridge splitting compared to conventional bone grafting .

The main indication for ridge splitting is to expand a horizontally reduced ridge in the maxilla and take advantage of elastic and cancellous quality of this bone and its peripheral type of blood perfusion.

Splitting a narrow mandibular ridge is possible but technically more difficult due to brittle, thicker, and more cortical nature of this bone .

A flapless approach in the maxilla offers the benefits that even small bone fragments remain attached to periosteum and are contained by the intact soft-tissue envelope. On balance, ridge expansion via splitting is effective but does have its limitations.
Onlay bone grafting, with addition to particulated grafts and a membrane for protection, is the more versatile and widely used approach

For more details, join the next batch of Advanced Implants Continuum: www.sachdevadentalcare.com or www.dentalcoursesdelhi.com

Regards :Dr.Prof.Rajat Sachdeva


Wednesday, February 3, 2016

Convocation of implant traning

Someone once asked me how teaching is different from curing. It took me a few years and many courses to understand that as a dentist I heal the body but as a teacher, I touch the souls. Every day when I teach, I give a piece of myself to each of my students. Teaching is all about guiding, facilitating, mentoring and above all learning. As we acknowledge the achievements of our young dentists on the eve of the convocation ceremony for the 16th batch of clinical implant training, I am filled with nothing but a sense of gratitude.

I am humbled and grateful to all those who contributed towards the success of these programmes that were meant to hone skills but ended up being life changing experiences.

Thursday, January 21, 2016

The “All-on-4” Concept for Implant Rehabilitation of an Edentulous Jaw

When a patient loses all of their teeth, they are essentially relegated to living the life of a “dental cripple” and are compelled to see  Dr.Sachdeva's Dental Institute, India to find resolution. The teeth are very essential to any human being and when a tooth or all teeth are lost, chewing efficiency is lost, their level of comfort declines and often they appear to age prematurely. The teeth provide more than a bright smile on someone’s face. A complete set of dentition maintains the bite and keeps all the structures in harmony. When changes occur after teeth are lost, patients begin to seek the dentist.
Edentulism can be a result of poor oral hygiene and dental disease. Sometimes patients who have received previous restorations meet a failure in their cases and their teeth are deemed restorable and hopeless. A growing number of the population possess a terminal dentition and the ability to retreat is restricted due to the poor remaining tooth structure and support, combined with limitations from the financial burden of full mouth reconstruction. How and why a person is edentulous varies. When patients come into the clinic, their oral condition is assessed and the appropriate solution is planned and presented—all encompassing the health and financial capacity of the patient.
It is well recognized that an edentulous condition has a negative impact on your life:
    • You need your teeth to eat because otherwise you will be limited to a soft, unappealing diet.
    • You need your teeth to smile, to flash a confident set of pearly whites to people.
    • You need your teeth to maintain the integrity of your facial structure, otherwise your bite will collapse and along with it, the face will sag and make you look much older.
    • You need your teeth to maintain the health of the jaw. The temporomandibular joints (TMJ) rely on the teeth. When the bite collapses, the changes that occur can be very damaging to the joints.
“All-on-4” implants have become a leading choice in many teeth replacement cases. 

Thursday, December 10, 2015

17th Batch Implant training

17th Batch of ICOI accrediated Implant training started with a bang , hands on sessions and implant placements on patients..loved the enthusiasm and zest to learn..still a long way to go in a field of implantology.. all the best and well done to all the clinicians