WIT Press


FE-simulation Of The Maxillary Sinus Floor Augmentation

Price

Free (open access)

Volume

8

Pages

10

Published

2005

Size

1,158 kb

Paper DOI

10.2495/BIO050441

Copyright

WIT Press

Author(s)

J. Lenz, S. Rues, H. P. Schierle, K. Schweizerhof & H. J. Schindler1

Abstract

The sinus floor augmentation was put into practice about 20 years ago to provide the severely atrophic maxilla (alveolar ridge inappropriate for classical implantation) with dental implants. In the most frequently used surgical method a window-like lid is milled into the buccal bone shell adjacent to the paranasal sinus in the region of teeth 5 - 7, and the bone lid is carefully flapped into the sinus without injuring the mucous membrane. Thus, a cavity is created into which either autologous bone material (e.g. from the chin or iliac crest) and/or bone substitute can be augmented to yield an adequately spacious support for (up to three) implants. After sufficient maturation of the graft (healing phase of several months) the implants can be connected to a superstructure. In this contribution the sinus floor is geometrically reproduced on the basis of a selfdeveloped three-dimensional model of the facial skull which contains all cortical and spongy structures. With the aid of the Finite Element Method (FEM) the distributions of stress, strain and displacement in the cortical and spongy bone as well as in the graft are analysed under different masticatory loads with special attention to the force deduction in the different structures. A variation of Young’s modulus Egraft of the augmented material between 0.01 and 15 GPa (cortical bone), thus simulating different degrees of maturation, proves that already about half of the external axial force is picked up by the graft when it reaches the maturation of spongy bone (2 GPa). Furthermore, the analysis shows that for Egraft = 2 GPa the microstrains under average chewing forces fall into the physiological or mild overuse window according to Frost’s Mechanostat Theory. Keywords: implantology, sinus lift, augmentation, bone remodeling, FEM.

Keywords

implantology, sinus lift, augmentation, bone remodeling, FEM.