L6 - Osteotomy and Osteoplasty
indications for osseous surgery
generalized periodontitis with pronounced irregular bone loss defects exhibiting sharp bony margins or exostoses bony architecture preventing good plaque control
LAP osseous defects
circumferential defects
interdental scalloping
decreases ant to post pyramidal form anterior
bacteria in pocket reduction with osseous surg
favorable shift in subging g- anaerobes to G+ cocci and rods
pocket reduction with osseous surgery post op
fewer sited with bleeding on probing
osteotomy and osteoplasty for 1 wall defect
full thickness flap remove granulation tissue instrument root surfaces sharp and protuberant bone is recontoured under contact cooling interdental craters are opened tooth supporting bone not removed apically positions flap
definitive osseous surgery
osseous defecs corrected achieve positive or neutral architecture shallow to mon bony defects (2-3mm) one or two wall defects
Compromised osseous surgery
osseous defect can be improved but can't be completely corrected w/o removing so much bone that teeth would be jeopardized "treatment worse than disease' advanced attachment loss and deep intra bony defects cant achieve positive architecture
most predictable method for pockets with osseous defects
pocket reduction with osseous surgery
pt related osseous surgery failures
poor plaque control - root caries faile to follow post op instructions
pocket reduction with osseous surgery
reduced both alveolar bone and attachment -limited by amount of bone and attachment loss that is acceptable - compromised osseous surgery
respective osseous surgery procedures
remontoir alveolar bone to eliminate osseous defects from periodontitis correct anatomic defects such as exotoses
ostectomy
removing tooth supporting bone
Goals of respective osseous surgery
reshape bone to a physiologic contour soft tissue healing with sulcus depth of 0-2mm
osteoplasty
reshaping bone w/o removing tooth supporting bone
surgical tech leading to osseous failure
short term - post op infection, poor flap management (necrosis) long term - incomplete pocket elimination, deviations from ideal form, poor suturing, expose thin bone, dishecences, or fenestrations
contraindications for osseous surgery
Pt meds, poor oral health anatomy - prog of maxillary sinus, mandibular rams severe alveolar bone loss, extreme root sensitivity, unacceptable post op esthetics
physiologic alveolar bone
alveolar crest parallels CEJ scalloped, parabolic shape interdental bone coronal to radicular bone thin alveolar margin interproximla sluiceways
chronic periodontitis osseous defects
inter proximal osseous crater
negative osseous architecture
interdental bone apical to radicular bone leads to progressing attachment and bone loss
Flat osseous architecture
interdental bone at same level as radicular bone
Positive osseous architecture
interdental bone coronal to radicular bone
what dictates tx
morphology of defect