Histological evaluation of bone graft healing in maxillary sinus floor augmentation at two healing time points: a randomized clinical trial
Ricardo Pasquini, Leandro Eduardo Klüppel, Rubens Moreno de Freitas, Luíz Antônio Violin, Silvio Roberto Consonni, Elcio Marcantonio, Tatiana Miranda Deliberador

TL;DR
This study shows that waiting 8 months instead of 4 after a bone graft in the maxillary sinus leads to better bone formation and quality.
Contribution
The study provides empirical evidence that an 8-month healing period improves bone graft outcomes compared to 4 months.
Findings
An 8-month healing period resulted in significantly more new bone formation (28.22%) compared to 4 months (20.02%).
Collagen fibers in the 8-month group showed greater organization and thickness.
Residual bone substitute was significantly less in the 8-month group compared to the 4-month group.
Abstract
This study aims to compare the effects of two distinct healing periods (4 and 8 months) on bone formation after maxillary sinus floor elevation surgeries using sintered bovine bone grafts through histological and histomorphometric analyses. Using a split-mouth design, fourteen participants with bilateral edentulism in the posterior maxilla were included and randomized into two groups with 4 months (Test Group - TG) and 8 months (Control Group - CG) of healing periods. After the healing period, bone samples were collected and subjected to histomorphometric analysis to quantify the percentages of newly formed bone, residual bone substitute, and soft tissues. Comparison between the groups was performed using the paired Student’s t-test (p<0.05). Twenty-eight maxillary sinus grafts were performed, and 54 dental implants were placed. Histological analysis revealed newly formed trabecular…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDental Implant Techniques and Outcomes · Sinusitis and nasal conditions · Periodontal Regeneration and Treatments
