# Evaluation of anatomical variants and pathological findings of the maxillary sinus prior to sinus floor elevation: A Cone Beam CT retrospective study in 660 patients

**Authors:** Maria Barka, Catherine Donta, Spyros Damaskos, Emmanouil Chatzipetros, Christos Angelopoulos

PMC · DOI: 10.4317/jced.61624 · Journal of Clinical and Experimental Dentistry · 2024-06-01

## TL;DR

This study used Cone Beam CT scans to evaluate the prevalence of anatomical and pathological variations in maxillary sinuses of 660 patients, finding significant associations with age and gender.

## Contribution

The study provides a comprehensive prevalence analysis of maxillary sinus variations and their associations with demographic factors using a large CBCT dataset.

## Key findings

- Antral septa were found in 38.6% of patients, and the posterior superior alveolar artery was identifiable in 90.2%.
- Significant associations were found between gender and several anatomical/pathological features, including PSAA diameter and sinusitis.
- Age was significantly associated with PSAA diameter and the presence of sinusitis.

## Abstract

Maxillary sinuses may present a wide spectrum of anatomical variations and pathological lesions whose recognition is mandatory for the clinician, especially prior to any surgical intervention in the area, such as in cases of sinus floor elevation. The goal of this study was the evaluation, mapping and prevalence of sinus anatomical variants and pathoses in Cone Beam Computed Tomography (CBCT) scans of dental patients.

660 CBCT examinations of adult patients involving both sinuses were obtained (between 2017 and 2023) and analyzed. The following anatomic variants and pathologic findings were evaluated: antral septa (AS), posterior superior alveolar artery (PSAA), sinus hypoplasia, sinusitis, odontogenic cysts, retention cysts, antroliths, and various less common lesions (e.g.: benign fibro-osseous dysplastic lesions, neoplasms etc.). Investigation of the association of the findings with patients’ age and gender was performed using the Chi-square test (X2), Fisher’s exact test, t-test, and ANOVA (P<0.05). Differences in prevalence between findings, based on their location (right and/or left sinus), were investigated using z-test and t-test.

AS were found in 38.6%, and PSAA was identifiable in 90.2% (mean distance from the sinus floor=6.44 mm) of the patients respectively. 3% of patients had hypoplasia, 15.6% sinusitis, 2.7% odontogenic cysts, 16.1% retention cysts, 8.6% antroliths, and 1.7% uncommon lesions (e.g. malignant neoplasms and fibrous dysplasia). A statistically significant association was found between gender and PSAA diameter, PSAA distance from the sinus floor, hypoplasia, sinusitis, and retention cysts, as well as a statistically significant association between age and PSSA diameter and sinusitis.

The prevalence of various anatomical variants and pathologic findings of the maxillary sinus did not differ based on their location. However, some of these findings appear to be related to either gender or age. CBCT is a valuable diagnostic tool to identify various anatomical variants and pathological findings of the maxillary sinus.

Key words:Sinus, anatomy, pathology, CBCT.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** hypoplasia (MESH:D000080344), malignant neoplasms (MESH:D009369), sinus hypoplasia (MESH:D012852), retention cysts (MESH:D016055), fibro-osseous dysplastic lesions (MESH:D000070896), fibrous dysplasia (MESH:D005357), odontogenic cysts (MESH:D009807)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

36 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11310974/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11310974