Publication date: Available online 3 August 2018
Source: Journal of Cranio-Maxillofacial Surgery
Author(s): Jieyun Zhao, Luxiang Zou, Dongmei He, Edward Ellis
Summary
Purpose
The aim of the study was to compare bone adaptation after design modification in Biomet stock prostheses.
Materials and Methods
Computed tomography (CT) data of the patients treated with a Biomet TMJ replacement from 2010 to 2016 were recruited. Fossa prosthesis with a bulge and 4 types of condyle-ramus angle prostheses were virtually designed and implanted by computer-assisted simulation. The amount of bone trimming including fossa, mandibular ramus and bone graft were measured by ProPlan CMF 1.4 software. The differences between the original and modified prostheses were compared by SPSS 17.0 software for statistical analysis.
Results
There were 54 patients' CT data included in the study. The amount of fossa bone trimming was 150.20mm3 in the modified prosthesis and 281.82mm3 in the original one. The amount of ramus bone trimming was 103.86mm3 in the modified prosthesis and 229.45mm3 in the original one. The amount of fossa bone grafting was 95.88mm3 in the modified prosthesis and 263.03mm3 in the original one. There were significant differences between them (p=0.000).
Conclusions
The modified Biomet prostheses design requires less bone trimming and grafting for implantation.
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