Many times, when a dentist mentions dental surgery it is met with widespread panic and fear from their patients. The idea is that dental surgery is a painful and expensive procedure.
However, what many patients don’t realize is that dental surgery is very common and includes procedures that address conditions that many people have and suffer from. Each patient is different and every case is treated accordingly. For the most part, dental surgery is considered an outpatient procedure and patients can generally resume normal activity within a few days.
Dental surgery is the surgery of jaw bones and teeth. Therefore, it covers quite a number of dental procedures or medical procedures that involve artificial modification of dentition. It includes the following procedures below.
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Wisdom tooth last erupted in the mouth; They are called third molars. Although it usually differs according to racial, genetic characteristics and diet, these teeth that erupt at the end of both sides of the jaw in the 18-24 age range, sometimes do not erupt or remain impacted until late ages. Although all teeth in the jaw are likely to be impacted, the most impacted teeth are wisdom teeth due to the lack of sufficient space in the mouth.
Although there are many reasons such as underlying infections due to untreated caries of milk teeth, historical research also gives us other clues about the change of the jawbone.
According to the researches of anthropologists, there has been a change and shrinkage in the structure of the jawbone as a result of factors such as the change in the diet of people over time and the continuation of the evolution process. The fact that wisdom teeth were found in 80% of the skeletons of young people from the Chalcolithic and Copper Ages during excavations in Anatolia confirms this view.
Wisdom teeth, which cannot find enough space in the mouth to come out, usually remain buried or partially erupted and cause complaints such as pain around the tooth, earache, and restriction in mouth opening. Because of their location, they are often not cleaned well, which can lead to cavities, inflammation and sometimes cysts.
Wisdom teeth should be extracted as early as possible. Because the jawbone loses its flexibility in advanced ages, complaints such as swelling, pain and numbness may be encountered after extraction. At young ages, the probability of such complaints is low, since the root development of the tooth is not yet completed.
Although some of the problems related to wisdom teeth can be resolved with antibiotic treatment, extraction should be performed by a maxillofacial surgeon in the following cases;
Extraction of wisdom teeth is a procedure performed under local anesthesia.
After the soft tissue is removed, the bone tissue around the tooth is removed. Sometimes the tooth is broken into pieces and removed in smaller pieces. Sometimes, the bone around the tooth is removed from the jaw with special tools. Then the extraction cavity is cleaned and closed with soft tissue sutures. After these procedures, antibiotics or painkillers are recommended to the patient.
Apical resection is the operation of surgically cutting the root tip of the teeth with inflammation at the root tip, removing the pathological formations in this region and at the same time cleaning and filling the root canal or canals from bacteria.
In order to see and treat the bone and root surface under the soft tissue, the process of removing the soft tissue and gingiva by cutting is called flap operation.
In the mouth, dental plaque and tartar enter the gingival pocket and cause inflammation. It is difficult for patients to physically clean the microorganisms that enter the gingival pocket. After a certain period of time, tooth brushing will not work. Dentists apply gingival treatment in these cases. However, in cases such as deep pockets and bone retraction, it is difficult to clean the gingival pockets clinically and the infection recurs constantly. In these cases, dentists apply periodontal flap surgery to remove the soft tissue and clean the dental plaque and microorganisms on the underlying tooth root. In this way, the effects of the infection and its recurrence are eliminated.
Flap operations are the basis of all kinds of surgical procedures, not only for cleaning dental plaque and microorganisms on the root surface. It is used in root tooth extractions, implant surgery, wisdom tooth extraction, orthognathic surgery and many surgical fields.
There are many flap techniques in periodontal flap surgery. These are chosen according to their intended use. Flap surgery is performed when:
There are spaces called sinuses in the right and left parts of the upper jawbone (maxilla). The main task of these cavities is to reduce the weight of the skull bones. These spaces can expand in volume with the effect of air pressure, especially after tooth extraction. This volumetric enlargement and decrease in bone volume are more common in areas that have not been treated for a long time and are edentulous. This may prevent implantation in edentulous areas under the sinus.
edentulousness or tooth extraction in the upper jaws. It leads to a decrease in bone volume. In order to overcome this difficulty, the technique of filling the sinus cavities with bone or materials that turn into bone, also called sinus lift. Sinus lifting operations have been developed over the years. A special surgical intervention called Sinus Lifting should be applied to decrease the volume of the sinuses and increase the bone volume. With this operation, which can be performed under local or general anesthesia according to the patient’s request, bone particles are placed between the jawbone and the sinus mucosa and it is waited for at least 4-6 months for bone formation.
In sinus lifting operations, the patient’s own bone (autogenous graft) or materials that can turn into bone (biomaterials) can be used. Biomaterials show a wide variety of sources, including synthetically produced calcium-phosphate compounds (Hydroxylapatite, Tricalcium Phosphate), corals, glass-based, animal (bovine-pig) or human origin. In response to the question of which of these materials is the best, it is possible to say that the human’s own tissue (autogenous graft) is always the most efficient among grafts. However, studies have shown that all materials give similar results when the operation technique is applied correctly.
Today; The general approach is that the graft volume required for sinus lifting is approximately 2-3 cm3 for each sinus, so instead of taking bone from another part of the patient’s body, bovine deproteinized-mineral graft (which does not have the risk of carrying disease because it is free from protein, and the mineral part is calcium and mineral part of human bone). It is in the direction of using the mineral component consisting of phosphate). A mixture of the patient’s own bone and synthetic graft is also widely used.
As a result, sinus lifting is applied in cases where the sinus floor is drooping and the bone height is below 4mm, with tooth deficiencies in the maxilla, posterior region of the premolars and molars, which we use most for chewing. It is a surgical method that involves filling the sinus cavity with materials that turn into bone in order to make a fixed implant-supported prosthesis. The application has a simple surgical technique. The post-operative period is smooth and comfortable for the patients. Although the surgical method is simple, it requires very sensitive work.
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