Àá½Ã¸¸ ±â´Ù·Á ÁÖ¼¼¿ä. ·ÎµùÁßÀÔ´Ï´Ù.

ÀÓÇöõÆ® º¸Ã¶À» À§ÇÑ ÇÏ¾Ç ÀÚ°¡ ºí·Ï°ñ À̽ļú: Áõ·Êº¸°í

Mandibular Autogenous Block Bone Graft for Implant Prosthesis : Case Reports

´ëÇÑÀΰøÄ¡¾Æ°ñÀ¯ÂøÇÐȸÁö 2011³â 3±Ç 1È£ p.40 ~ 48
¼±È­°æ, ¹Ú½½Áö, Áö¿µ´ö,
¼Ò¼Ó »ó¼¼Á¤º¸
¼±È­°æ ( Seon Hwa-Gyeong ) - ¿ø±¤´ëÇб³ Ä¡°ú´ëÇÐ ±¸°­¾Ç¾È¸é¿Ü°úÇб³½Ç
¹Ú½½Áö ( Park Seul-Ji ) - ¿ø±¤´ëÇб³ Ä¡°ú´ëÇÐ ±¸°­¾Ç¾È¸é¿Ü°úÇб³½Ç
Áö¿µ´ö ( Chee Young-Deok ) - ¿ø±¤´ëÇб³ Ä¡°ú´ëÇÐ ±¸°­¾Ç¾È¸é¿Ü°úÇб³½Ç

Abstract


It makes difficult to operate dental implants for prosthetic treatment for increasing alveolar bone defect, through long time passed after teeth extraction. Bone grafting is almost performed in clinic as alveolar bone augmentation for recovery of bone absorption. Autogenous bone has been the gold standard of bone graft materials and is the only osteogeneic bone material in clinically available bone graft materials. Because of high biostability, it has no immune rejection response and fast healing ability in patients. Autogenous bone from intraoral donor site is easier for collecting and more combined with recipient site for intramembranous ossifying bone than that of extraoral donor site. Intraoral autogenous block bone that has
good rigidity is used for maintaining configuration and protecting stability on reconstructed area selectively. Typical intraoral autogenous block bones are from mandibular ramus and symphysis areas. In this article, we report the cases grafting autogenous block bone from intraoral site such as mandibular ramus and symphysis to severe alveolar bone defect area and performing dental implant prosthetic treatment.

Å°¿öµå

Bony atrophy; Autogenous bone; Block bone graft; Micro-screw fixation; Implant

¿ø¹® ¹× ¸µÅ©¾Æ¿ô Á¤º¸

 

µîÀçÀú³Î Á¤º¸