Title: Alveolar Bone Grafting
1Alveolar Bone Grafting
- Jaime Gateno, DDS, MD
- Associate Professor
- Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery
2Alveolar Bone Grafting
- Rational
- Age
- Type of Bone and Donor Site
- Timing of Maxillary Expansion
- Techniques
3Alveolar Bone GraftingRational
- Provide bone for the eruption and/or orthodontic
repositioning of teeth - Closure of oro-nasal fistulas
- Support and elevation of the alar base
- Stabilization of the pre-maxilla in bilateral
cases - Provide continuity of the alveolar ridge
4Definitions
- Primary Bone Grafting
- Bone graft done at the time of primary
cheiloplasty - Bone graft done during the first 2 years of life
- Bone graft done prior to the eruption of the
primary canine
5Definitions
- Secondary Bone Grafting
- Early
- Intermediate (Secondary)
- Late
6Secondary Bone Grafting
- Done before eruption of the permanent canine
- Usually when the root of the canine is 1/3 to 2/3
formed - Usually between ages 8-10
- In CLP dental age is usually behind chronological
age
7Early Secondary Bone Grafting
- Done before eruption of the permanent lateral
incisor - Usually when the lateral is 1/3 to 2/3 formed
- Ages 5-6
- Lateral incisor is frequently hypoplastic
8Late Secondary Bone Grafting
- Done after eruption of the permanent canine
- Usually during adolescence or adulthood
- Sometimes done concomitantly with orthognathic
surgery
9Primary Bone Grafting
- Popular in the 1950s -60s
- Usually done in conjunction with maxillary
orthopedics - Rib grafts placed either simultaneously with lip
repair or shortly after - Largely abandoned due to questions about
maxillary growth and development - Still done in some centers
10Primary Bone Grafting
- Rational
- Prevention of maxillary arch collapse
- Migration of teeth into the alveolar process
- Stabilization of the pre-maxilla in bilateral
cases - Support for the alar base
- Dado DV. Early Primary Bone Grafting. In
Kernahan DA, Rosenstein SW, eds. Cleft Lip and
Palate. A System of Management. Williams and
Wilkins, Baltimore, 1990. pp 182-188. - Nelson CL Primary Alveolar Cleft Bone Grafting.
Oral Maxillofac Surg Clin NA 3599, 1991.
11Primary Bone Grafting
- Disadvantages
- Data suggest that primary bone grafting has a
negative effect on maxillary growth and
nasolabial appearance - May necessitate further bone grafting in
childhood due to insufficient alveolar bulk - Friede H, Johanson B Adolescent facial
morphology of early bone grafted cleft lip and
palate patients. Scand J Plast Reconstr Surg
1641-53, 1982 - Trotman CA, etal Comparison of facial form in
primary alveolar bone-grafted and nongrafted
unilateral cleft lip and palate patients. Cleft
Palate Craniofac J 3391, 1996
12Primary Bone Grafting
13Primary Bone Grafting
14Gingivo-Periosteoplasty
- Boneless primary bone graft
- Relies on the osteoinductive capabilities of the
periosteum
Skoog T The use of periosteum and surgicel for
bone restoration in congenital clefts of the
maxilla. Scan J Plast Reconst Surg 1 113,
1967 Wood RJ, Grayson BH, Cutting CB
Gingivoperiosteoplasty and midfacial growth.
Cleft Palate Craniofac J 3417-20, 1997 Carstens
MH Functional matrix cleft repair principles
and techniques. Clin Plast Surg 31159-189, 2004
15Secondary Bone Graft
- Performed most commonly
- Particulate autogenous cancellous bone
- most common graft
- No observed growth disturbance
16Type of Bone
- Autogenous
- Cancellous- iliac crest
- Block
- Particulate
- Cortical- calvarium, mandible
- Bone dust
- Blocks
- Cortico-cancellous- iliac, rib, tibia, mandible
(tibia and mandible only in late secondary
grafting)
17Type of Bone
- Allogeneic
- Graft resorbs, remodels, may contribute to
osteoinduction and osteoconduction - Nique T, Fonseca RJ, et al Particulate
allogeneic bone grafts into maxillary alveolar
clefts in humans- A preliminary report. J Oral
Maxillofac Surg 45 386-392, 1987 - Alloplast
- Bone grows into, around alloplast
- No active osteoinduction but some osteoconduction
- Teeth do not erupt through alloplast
- Horswell BB, El Deeb M Nonporous HA in the
repair of alveolar cleft defect in a primate
model. J Oral Maxiilofac Surg 47946-952, 1989
18Timing of Maxillary Expansion
- Before Alveolar Bone Grafting
- Primarily for later secondary grafting
- Optimal positioning of cleft segments and
reorientation of teeth collapsed into defect - After Alveolar Bone Grafting
- Earlier secondary grafting
19Alveolar Bone GraftTechnique
Incision and flap design for unilateral cleft
defect repair
20Alveolar Bone GraftTechnique
Elevation of labial and buccal mucoperiosteal
flaps
21Alveolar Bone GraftTechnique
Creation of labial and palatal flaps after
excision of intradefect fistula
22Alveolar Bone GraftTechnique
Buccal flap elevated superiorly Palatal flaps
elevated and pushed posteriorly
23Alveolar Bone GraftTechnique
Closure of nasal floor mucosa superiorly (NF) and
palatal mucosa (PM) posteriorly
NF
PM
24Alveolar Bone Graft Technique
Placement of particulate cancellous bone into
defect
25Alveolar Bone GraftTechnique
26Alveolar Bone GraftTechnique
Labial pedicled finger flap elevated to cover
bone graft as alternative to sliding buccal
mucoperiosteal flap
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38Preoperative Cleft Defect
Postoperative Bone Graft