The bone regeneration is one of the most important challenges for regenerative medicine. In maxillo-facial area, bone resorption of the alveolar crest occurs after tooth extraction and leads to several risks for rehabilitation treatments, including dental implants procedures. Goal of our study was to demonstrate the efficacy of an innovative clinical protocol of bone tissue engineering called Rigenera protocol, aimed to create and optimize bio-complexes constituted by collagen biomaterial and human autologous periosteum-derived micro-grafts. We assessed the capacity of these bio-complexes to prevent the bone resorption in the alveolar crest with respect to simple collagen performing histological evaluations of neo-formed osseous tissue. We demonstrated that autologous bio-complexes significantly reduced the bone resorption of both horizontal and vertical dimension of alveolar crest when compared to collagen alone. We also showed that these bio-complexes accelerate the ossification process triggering the formation of new osseous tissue after 45 days from treatment and increasing the calcified matrix after 60 days and until to 120 days with respect to collagen alone. Taken together, these data showed the efficacy of bio-complexes composed by periosteum-derived micro-grafts and collagen in the alveolar ridge preservation through a reduction of bone resorption and an enhancement of new osseous tissue formation.
We assessed the oral cancer (OC) knowledge, including risk factors and clinical symptoms, among patients attending dental departments within Italian university hospitals. Two thousand and two hundred questionnaires were sent to four hospitals in order to assess patients’ knowledge regarding clinical and epidemiological aspects of OC; OC knowledge was evaluated overall and stratified by oral cancer family history. Participants frequently identified cigarette smoking (87.8%) and heavy alcohol consumption (58.6%) as a risk factor for oral cancer, knew the clinical signs of OC (65–79% depending on the specific symptom) and reported that early detection was related to better prognosis of oral cancer (94%). Individuals with a positive family history for oral cancer were significantly more likely to identify risk factors for oral cancer correctly yet family history of OC did not affect smoking status. Less than 15% of patients reported having received OC counseling by a dentist or physician.
Sixty consecutive patients with Stage III or bulky Stage II nonseminomatous germinal testis tumors were treated with cisplatin, vinblastine, bleomycin combination chemotherapy (PVB). One patient died of acute toxicity after the first course of therapy, 16 entered complete remission (CR) after two or three inductions, and 36 underwent surgery for removal of residual masses after the third cycle. No residual tumor was found in 16 cases, 10 had mature teratoma, and residual malignant tumor was completely resected in 8 of 10 patients. On the whole, 52 of 59 cases (88%) who completed the therapy entered CR, 34 (58%) with PVB and 18 (30%) with PVB and resection of the residual disease. The major beneficiaries of surgery were patients with bulky metastases (17 of 45, 38%) and those with primary teratocarcinoma (13 of 24, 54%). All of the patients who entered CR received two additional inductions and no maintenance. After a median follow-up period of greater than 3 years, 40 patients (68%) remain continuously disease-free, 1 died in CR, and 3 of the 11 who had relapse were salvaged. All of the 32 patients with lung deposits less than 5 cm and/or lymph node metastases less than 10 cm entered CR after the combined treatment modality, and 29 (91%) are alive disease-free. Also, 20 of 27 patients (74%) with far-advanced disease (lung and lymph node metastases larger than 5 and 10 cm, respectively, extrapulmonary disease) entered CR after PVB and surgery, but only 11 (41%) are continuously disease-free. Early resection of the residual tumor during PVB combination chemotherapy greatly increased the CR rate, but relapses were very frequent in patients with far-advanced disease.
Objective Preliminary data on survival and success rates of immediately loaded, maxillary, screw-retained, implant-supported, fixed restorations delivered on narrow and low-profile OT Equator abutments (OT Bridge, Rhein’83) were evaluated. Materials and Methods This retrospective study evaluated data collected from patients rehabilitated with OT Bridge prosthetic concept between November 2017 and February 2019 in six different centers. Outcome measures were implant and prosthetic survival rates, biological and technical complications, marginal bone loss (MBL), oral health impact profile (OHIP), bleeding on probing, and plaque index. Results A total of 76 implants were inserted in 14 patients. Patients were followed for a mean period of 15.8 months (range = 12–24). All the patients receive OT Equator (Rhein'83) as intermediate abutments. One year after loading, one implant failed (1.3%). None of the prosthesis failed. One prosthetic complication was experienced in one patient. Three out of 76 implants were connected to the prosthetic framework using only the Seeger system, without screw. Difference in OHIP values was statistically significant (71.9 ± 8.5; p = 0.000). One year after loading, MBL was 0.21 ± 0.11 mm and p-value was 0.000. One year after loading, 8.7% of the examined implant sites present positive bleeding on probing, while 6.4% of the implant sites presented plaque. Conclusion The OT Equator abutments (Rhein'83) showed successful results when used to support maxillary fixed dental prosthesis delivered on four to six implants. High implant and prosthetic survival rates, very low complications, high patient satisfaction, and good biological parameters, including only 0.2 mm of bone remodeling were experienced one year after function. Further studies are needed to confirm these preliminary results.
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