Procedures
Bone
Grafting
Tooth roots play a vital role beyond just anchoring teeth; they also stimulate the underlying jawbone through daily activities like chewing. When teeth are missing, this natural stimulation is lost, leading to bone resorption or jawbone deterioration. At Metroplex Oral & Facial Surgery, we offer advanced bone grafting procedures to rebuild lost bone, ensuring long-term oral health and the stability needed for successful tooth restoration. Without sufficient bone density, placing dental implants becomes impossible, and bone loss can lead to dental shifting, facial structure changes, and other complications. Bone grafting is designed to restore bone that has deteriorated due to tooth loss, injuries, or surgery, and our highly skilled oral surgeons have years of experience performing these essential procedures.
Types of
Bone Grafting
Bone grafting procedures follow a similar principle: a mixture of granulated bone material, growth factors, and other healing agents is applied to areas that are lacking sufficient bone. The bone material can come from either another part of your body or a tissue bank, depending on the specific procedure. Oral surgeons typically perform these grafts in key areas around the mouth and jaws, such as the alveolar ridge, tooth sockets, and sinuses, to promote bone regeneration and support future dental work.
Socket preservation grafts are used to prevent bone loss in an empty tooth socket following the loss or extraction of a tooth. Without intervention, the surrounding bone can quickly deteriorate. To counter this, oral surgeons place a bone graft directly into the socket, helping maintain the bone structure and preparing the area for future dental implant placement while preserving facial contours.
The maxillary sinuses are behind your cheeks and on top of the upper teeth. Sinuses are like empty rooms that have nothing in them. Some of the roots of the natural upper teeth extend up into the maxillary sinuses. When these upper teeth are removed, there is often just a thin wall of bone separating the maxillary sinus and the mouth. Dental implants need bone to hold them in place. When the sinus wall is very thin, it is impossible to place dental implants in this bone.
There is a solution and it’s called a sinus graft or sinus lift graft. The dental implant surgeon enters the sinus from where the upper teeth used to be. The sinus membrane is then lifted upward and donor bone is inserted into the floor of the sinus. Keep in mind that the floor of the sinus is the roof of the upper jaw. After several months of healing, the bone becomes part of the patient’s jaw and dental implants can be inserted and stabilized in this new sinus bone.
The sinus graft makes it possible for many patients to have dental implants when years ago there was no other option other than wearing loose dentures.
If enough bone between the upper jaw ridge and the bottom of the sinus is available to stabilize the implant well, sinus augmentations and implant placement can sometimes be performed as a single procedure. If not enough bone is available, the sinus augmentation will have to be performed first, then the graft will have to mature for several months, depending upon the type of graft material used. Once the graft has matured, the implants can be placed.
In severe cases, the ridge has been reabsorbed and a bone graft is placed to increase ridge height and/or width. This is a technique used to restore the lost bone dimension when the jaw ridge gets too thin to place conventional implants. In this procedure, the bony ridge of the jaw is literally expanded by mechanical means. Bone graft material can be placed and matured for a few months before placing the implant.
Bone grafting can repair implant sites with inadequate bone structure due to previous extractions, gum disease or injuries. The bone is either obtained from a tissue bank or your own bone is taken from the jaw, hip or tibia (below the knee). Sinus bone grafts are also performed to replace bone in the posterior upper jaw. In addition, special membranes may be utilized that dissolve under the gum and protect the bone graft and encourage bone regeneration. This is called guided bone regeneration or guided tissue regeneration.
Major bone grafts are typically performed to repair defects of the jaws. These defects may arise as a result of traumatic injuries, tumor surgery, or congenital defects. Large defects are repaired using the patient’s own bone. This bone is harvested from a number of different sites depending on the size of the defect. The skull (cranium), hip (iliac crest), and lateral knee (tibia), are common donor sites. These procedures are routinely performed in an operating room and require a hospital stay.
