Mahmood Qureshi
Pakistan Academy of Implant Dentistry, Pakistan
Posters & Accepted Abstracts: Surgery 2018
In a relentless pursuance of perfection and a definitive solution for long term stability of tissues around dental implants, an exceptional concept - the â??Bone Renaissanceâ??- a unique philosophy encompassing the sequential and codified reversal of the bone back to its original 3-D engineered divine Osseo-architecture (com'era, dov'era) is presented; by incorporating the 5 in 1 modus operandi: â??SABIRINâ?? (Stable Alveolar Bone Implant Reconstructive Integration Naturally), a major paradigm shift in reestablishing the natural spiritual union of the form and function. Loss of teeth always leads to the shrinkage of jaw bone at the extraction site with a 50-70% bone loss in height and width over a period of 2-4 years resulting in unaesthetic facial lines, increase in size of maxillary sinus, over closure, prognathic appearance, reduced horizontal labial angle of lip, loss of tone in muscles of facial expression causing functional, anatomical and cosmetic problems. A typical patient, with existing edentulous areas and desiring implant treatment doesnâ??t have adequate bone to permit implants to be placed into normal root locations. This atrophy is a dynamic functional loss as the bone heals and changes from stress bearing to non-stress bearing bone for implant placement. SABIRIN components: Bone renaissance implant placement with especial osteotomes, soft tissue manipulation, vascularized osteotomies, sinus and onlay grafts, autologous growth factors and stem cells. The refurbishment of patients to innate curve, contour, aesthetics and function is achieved by using SABIRIN components which resurrect the lost contours of hard and soft tissues with a long-term, aesthetic predictability. Based on the 25 years of experience, the presenter thoroughly discusses the rationale, gives practical guidelines and presents surgical maneuvers to rectify hard and soft tissue deficiencies complemented by CGF to enhance facial aesthetics.
E-mail: mqimplants@gmail.com
Journal of Surgery received 288 citations as per Google Scholar report