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Open AccessJournal Article

Maxillary and sinus implant reconstructions.

Tatum H
- 01 Apr 1986 - 
- Vol. 30, Iss: 2, pp 207-229
TLDR
The root and sinus series of the Omnii system have been used extensively and their design attempts to maximize the use of the available bone, and placement techniques allow the manipulation of bone to form sockets in otherwise deficient areas of bone.
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This article is published in Dental Clinics of North America.The article was published on 1986-04-01 and is currently open access. It has received 1350 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Sinus lift & Sinus Floor Augmentation.

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Journal Article

Long-term results in placement of screw-type implants in the pterygomaxillary-pyramidal region.

TL;DR: Implant placement in the posterior pterygomaxillary region using cylindric osteotomes for osteotomy preparation resulted in an implant survival rate of 94.7% and lowered surgical risk and diminished bone loss.
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An Accuracy Study of Computer-Planned Implant Placement in the Augmented Maxilla Using Mucosa-Supported Surgical Templates.

TL;DR: Computer-aided implant planning showed to be a clinically relevant tool, however, this study emphasizes that the surgeon should take into account that deviations are larger compared with implant placement without augmentation procedure.
Journal Article

Sinus floor elevation by osteotome: hand mallet versus electric mallet. A prospective clinical study.

TL;DR: A significant increase in bone height was achieved between 6 and 12 months, and bone levels remained stable at 2 years, suggesting the use of an electric mallet provided some essential advantages during surgery in comparison with the hand mallet.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reamer‐mediated transalveolar sinus floor elevation without osteotome and simultaneous implant placement in the maxillary molar area: clinical outcomes of 391 implants in 380 patients

TL;DR: It can be concluded that reamer-mediated transalveolar sinus floor elevation is a reliable method for implant placement in the posterior maxilla, even at sites with ≤ 4 mm of residual alveolar bone height.
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