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1.
Clin Cases Miner Bone Metab ; 13(3): 214-220, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28228785

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Recent studies have highlighted that MSCs are capable of regenerating large bone defects when used in combination with bone substitutes and increasing allo-graft osteointegration. We investigated the hypothesis that autologous MSCs may lead to increased bone regeneration and reduced healing time in post-surgical cavities of large maxillary bone lesions. METHODS: This study involved 10 patients (TEST GROUP) (6 males and 4 females). All patients had expansive mandibular lesions larger than 3 cm. From the surgical point of view, the 10 patients were treated with MSCs (withdrawal of the iliac crest bone marrow BMMSs) directly into the post-surgical cavity, without the addition of filler. RESULTS: and radiological data, in the postoperative, were compared to those of patients who did not receive any grafting of MSCs. The 7 patients with mandibular lesions showed a rapid and very good healing with an 85-90% ossification of the major defect at 12 months. CONCLUSIONS: Through the use of stem cells a greater ossification of the residual cavity (85-90%) was observed at 12 months after surgical enucleation in contenitive defects.

2.
Clin Cases Miner Bone Metab ; 12(2): 183-7, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26604947

ABSTRACT

Autologous bone, for its osteoconductive, osteoinductive and osteogenetic properties, has been considered to be the gold standard for maxillary sinus augmentation procedures. Autograft procedures bring also some disadvantages: sometimes the limited amount of available intraoral bone makes necessary to obtain bone from an extraoral site, and this carries an associated morbidity. To overcome this problem we started using homologous freeze-dried bone in maxillary sinus augmentation procedures. This bone is industrially processed with γ-irradiation to eliminate its disease transmission potential and it's considered safe, but this treatment also eliminates the osteoinductive and osteogenetic properties, making it just an inert scaffold for regeneration. Mesenchymal stem cells are successfully used in and orthopedic surgery for their amplification potential of healing mechanisms. We assumed that mesenchymal stem cells can restore the osteogenetic and osteoinductive properties in homologous bone grafts. The aim of this study was an histological evaluation of bone regeneration in maxillary sinus elevation using: 1) mesenchymal stem cells engineered freeze-dried bone allografts; 2) freeze-dried bone allografts. Twenty patients (10M, 10F) with a mean age of 55.2 years affected by severe maxillary atrophy were treated with bilateral maxillary sinus floor elevation. For each patient were randomly assigned a "test" side and a "control" side, different from each other exclusively in the composition of the graft material. The "control" sides were composed by corticocancellous freeze-dried bone chips and the "test" sides were composed by corticocancellous freeze-dried bone chips engineered in a bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells concentrate. After three months bone biopsies were performed on the grafts and histological specimens were made in order to evaluate the healed bone from an histological point of view. Histologically all the specimens showed active remodelling signs and all the tissues were free of inflammatory cells. "Control" side specimens showed a substantial persistence of the grafted bone and, with the interposition of connective tissue, a considerable amount of newly formed bone. "Test" side specimens showed a much more represented cellular component compared to the "control" sides. The grafted bone trabeculae, when detectable, were completely imprisoned inside new formed bone, in direct contact with it and without interposition of connective tissue. Freeze-dried bone can be used successfully as graft material in the treatment of maxillary atrophy. The same bone engineered with stem cells showed a greater histological integration potential comparable with autografts histological morphology. Further studies are needed to confirm these hypotheses.

3.
Clin Implant Dent Relat Res ; 14 Suppl 1: e98-108, 2012 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22013945

ABSTRACT

STATEMENT OF PROBLEM: Immediate occlusal loading of dental implants in the edentulous mandible has proven to be an effective, reliable, and predictable treatment protocol. However, there is limited long-term data available in the literature, when an electroeroded definitive cast-titanium fixed prosthesis is used for this treatment protocol. PURPOSE: The aim of this study was to evaluate the clinical effectiveness of dental implants (Astra Tech Dental, Mölndal, Sweden) in the edentulous mandible immediately loaded with an electroeroded cast-titanium screw-retained fixed prosthesis. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Forty-five patients received five implants each in the interforaminal area. All the implants were inserted with torque up to 40 Ncm and the distal implants were distally tilted approximately 20 to 30 degrees to minimize the length of posterior cantilevers. Implants were loaded within 48 hours of placement with an acrylic resin-titanium screw-retained prosthesis fabricated by electroerosion. RESULTS: Two of the 225 inserted implants failed after 3 and 16 months of healing, respectively, with a cumulative survival rate of 99.1% and a prosthetic survival rate of 97.8%. CONCLUSION: Immediate loading of tilted dental implants inserted in the edentulous mandible with a screw-retained titanium definitive prosthesis fabricated with electrical discharge machining provide reliable and predictable results.


Subject(s)
Dental Implants , Dental Materials/chemistry , Dental Prosthesis, Implant-Supported , Denture Retention/instrumentation , Immediate Dental Implant Loading/methods , Titanium/chemistry , Acrylic Resins/chemistry , Dental Casting Technique , Dental Marginal Adaptation , Dental Restoration Failure , Dental Restoration Wear , Denture Design , Denture, Complete, Lower , Electrochemical Techniques , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Jaw, Edentulous/rehabilitation , Jaw, Edentulous/surgery , Male , Mandible/surgery , Middle Aged , Osseointegration/physiology , Periodontal Index , Retrospective Studies , Survival Analysis , Torque , Treatment Outcome
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