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Report of the Sinus Consensus Conference of 1996.

TLDR
Retrospective data from sinus floor augmentation bone grafts was collected from 38 surgeons for 1007 sinus grafts that involved the placement of 2997 implants over a 10-year period, with the majority of the implants followed for 3 years or more postrestoration.
Abstract
Retrospective data from sinus floor augmentation bone grafts were collected from 38 surgeons for 1007 sinus grafts that involved the placement of 2997 implants over a 10-year period, with the majority of the implants followed for 3 years or more postrestoration. There were 229 implant failures reported. Various root-form implants and grafting modalities were used. A consensus conference was organized to evaluate the data and reach a consensus on optimal treatment protocols. The complete database demonstrated a 90.0% success rate for implants placed in sinus grafts with at least 3 years of function. Differences in grafting materials, implant surfaces, and timing protocols were statistically analyzed. However, the database was so multivariate and multifactorial that it was difficult to draw definitive conclusions; these must await controlled prospective studies. The consensus conference therefore developed and voted on multiple consensus statements derived by committee review for bone graft materials, type of implants, timing for implant placement, failure analysis, radiographic analysis, indications/contraindications, prosthetics, and nomenclature. Several consensus statements were obtained, the most significant being that the sinus graft should now be considered a highly predictable and effective therapeutic modality.

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Clinical complications with implants and implant prostheses.

TL;DR: The types of complications that have been reported in conjunction with endosseous root form implants and associated implant prostheses indicate a trend toward a greater incidence of complications with implant prosthesis than single crowns, fixed partial dentures, all-ceramic Crowns, resin-bonded prostheses, and posts and cores.
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Effect of Maxillary Sinus Augmentation on the Survival of Endosseous Dental Implants. A Systematic Review

TL;DR: The implant survival rates reported in this systematic review compare favorably to reported survival rates for implants placed in the non-grafted posterior maxilla, and rough-surfaced implants have a higher survival rate than machine-surfacing implants when placed in grafted sinuses.
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A systematic review of the success of sinus floor elevation and survival of implants inserted in combination with sinus floor elevation

TL;DR: The insertion of dental implants in combination with maxillary sinus floor elevation is a predictable treatment method showing high implant survival rates and low incidences of surgical complications.
Journal Article

Which hard tissue augmentation techniques are the most successful in furnishing bony support for implant placement

TL;DR: The maxillary sinus augmentation procedure has been well documented, and the long-term clinical success/survival (> 5 years) of implants placed, regardless of graft material(s) used, compares favorably to implants placed conventionally, with no grafting procedure.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bone augmentation techniques.

TL;DR: The techniques for reconstruction of bony defects that are reviewed in this paper include the use of particulate bone grafts and bone graft substitutes, barrier membranes for guided bone regeneration, autogenous and allogenic block grafts, and the application of distraction osteogenesis.
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