December 06, 2012

Guidelines for Treatment Planning Therapy

Guidelines for Treatment Planning Therapy 

Cone-Beam
Dr. Lyndon Cooper's popular dental implant guidelines for treatment planning therapy in the edentulous mandible are designed to improve the success of both the implants and the prosthesis.  The "rules" govern the biology and amount of bone necessary for implants sufficient to support chewing forces.  The "rules" also specify the distribution of the implants to control the forces they must withstand and the amount of space necessary to fabricate a prosthesis with enough structural integrity to withstand these forces.

Implant tissue bar/overdenture and implant supported/fixed (hybrid) prostheses

The rules apply to both implant tissue bar/overdenture and implant supported/fixed (hybrid) prostheses.
The first rule is that the lower jaw must allow for implants at least 10mm in length--that the mandible's inferior/superior dimension be a minimum of 10mm.  Evidence in the literature supports the conclusion that 10mm implants in the anterior mandible have an equally high survival rate than longer implants.

Second Rule

The second rule is that the vertical (restorative) dimension must be at least 10mm from ridge crest to occlusal plane. Using a "top down" approach, the average height of mandibular anterior teeth is 10mm, and there must be room for acrylic attachment, a rigid framework, abutment height and biologic width.  This allows for a prosthesis with structural integrity and permits establishment of proper contours in support of comfort, mastication and speech.

Third Rule

The third rule is that the anterior/posterior distribution of implants be at least 10mm for the hybrid.  This allows the lever arm from the anterior implants to the posterior implants to be sufficient for the counter leverage necessary to support 15mm of cantilevered teeth back to the first molar.

Cone-Beam Technology Required

Applying these rules requires using cone-beam computed technology for a volumetric assessment of the mandible.  It means determining final anterior and posterior tooth position prior to planning and executing implant placement and presurgical correlation of the anatomy of the mandible with the location of the planned prosthetic teeth.

Robert G. Tupac, DDS, FACP, Inc., 
Diplomate, American Board of Prosthodontics
(661) 325-1275 | www.drtupac.com
5060 California Ave., #170, Bakersfield, CA 93309

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.