Publications by authors named "Hanako Suenaga"

Article Synopsis
  • The study aimed to investigate the link between dental disease and postoperative infective complications (POICs) in patients undergoing major surgery.
  • The research involved pre-surgical dental evaluations and identified factors like the length of hospital stay and dental issues (such as decayed teeth and tongue plaque) as key predictors for developing POICs.
  • Findings suggest that preoperative dental assessments could help in assessing risks and potentially improving postoperative recovery outcomes for patients.
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Objectives: Oral bacteria may contribute to postoperative infectious complications including postoperative pneumonia or surgical site infection. The aim of this study was to investigate the impact of preoperative dental care on postoperative outcomes among surgical patients under general anesthesia.

Design: Retrospective cohort study.

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Patient: A 33-year-old man diagnosed with extranodal natural killer cell/T-cell lymphoma, nasal type (ENKTCL-NT) inducing palatal perforation was referred to the perioperative oral care support center of Tohoku University Hospital for dental care to support cancer treatment including chemotherapy and hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT). Dental review during chemotherapy revealed mucositis suspected to be caused by mucosal trauma from altered jaw function (chewing and speech) due to palatal perforation. Although the patient was already in the cleanroom, an oral appliance as well as conservative care as recommended in oral management guidelines for HSCT were used to prevent worsening of oral mucositis at subsequent HSCT including High-dose chemotherapy and total body irradiation.

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Patients: Seventy-one and 73 years-old males visited a perioperative oral care support center to receive perioperative oral management during tongue cancer (TNM) treatment. To improve their quality of life (QOL) during brachytherapy while preventing radiation-related complications including osteoradionecrosis due to Au grain brachytherapy, spacers for their maxilla and mandible were designed with consideration of wearing condition at an isolation ward. The spacer was created with unilateral design and with consideration of the tongue mobility during day and night.

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With ever-growing aging population and demand for denture treatments, pressure-induced mucosa lesion and residual ridge resorption remain main sources of clinical complications. Conventional denture design and fabrication are challenged for its labor and experience intensity, urgently necessitating an automatic procedure. This study aims to develop a fully automatic procedure enabling shape optimization and additive manufacturing of removable partial dentures (RPD), to maximize the uniformity of contact pressure distribution on the mucosa, thereby reducing associated clinical complications.

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Despite their considerable importance to biomechanics, there are no existing methods available to directly measure apparent Poisson's ratio and friction coefficient of oral mucosa. This study aimed to develop an inverse procedure to determine these two biomechanical parameters by utilizing in vivo experiment of contact pressure between partial denture and beneath mucosa through nonlinear finite element (FE) analysis and surrogate response surface (RS) modelling technique. First, the in vivo denture-mucosa contact pressure was measured by a tactile electronic sensing sheet.

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Polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA)-made prostheses used in the oral cavity were evaluated by multimodal assessment in order to elucidate the biodeterioration of PMMA. In used dentures (UD), the micro-Vickers hardness of the polished denture surface and denture basal surface was lower than that of the torn surface (p<0.05), whereas the shaved surface approximately 100 µm from the polished surface showed a similar value to the torn surface.

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Although implant-retained overdenture allows edentulous patients to take higher occlusal forces than the conventional complete dentures, the biomechanical influences have not been explored yet. Clinically, there is limited knowledge and means for predicting localized bone remodelling after denture treatment with and without implant support. By using finite element (FE) analysis, this article provides an in-silico approach to exploring the treatment effects on the oral mucosa and potential resorption of residual ridge under three different denture configurations in a patient-specific manner.

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This study aimed to investigate the pressure distribution beneath the denture bases of removable partial dentures (RPDs) with different occlusal rest designs (ORDs) by in vivo measurement. Four types of detachable occlusal rests (mesial and distal, distal, mesial, and nonrest) were placed on the direct abutment teeth of distal extension RPDs in four patients with free-end edentulous mandibles. Pressure measurements were obtained by using thin and flexible tactile sensors.

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Because of its high predictability of success, implant therapy is a reliable treatment for replacement of missing teeth. The concept of immediate implant loading has been widely accepted in terms of early esthetic and functional recovery. However, there is little biological evidence to support this concept.

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Objective: Excessive pressure due to wearing mal-adapting dentures is well known to cause residual bone resorption beneath the denture. X-rays have been commonly utilized to evaluate the changes in the bone beneath the denture. However, X-ray images merely detect bone density and relatively large changes in the bone shape and structure, whereas nuclear medicine imaging can detect functional changes, which occur prior to structural changes.

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Patient: A 66-year-old woman, who had a bilateral free-end edentulous mandible and no experience with dentures, was examined for the chief complaint of masticatory dysfunction on left side of dental arch. A unilateral distal extension removable partial denture (RPD) replacing lower-left molars was selected. Tomographic images were obtained using Fluorine-18 NaF positron emission computerized tomography (NaF-PET)/computed tomography (CT) before the RPD use and at 1, 6, and 13 weeks after the RPD use to observe the metabolic changes in residual bone caused by the RPD use.

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Purpose: To develop a system to measure the pressure distribution under the base of a removable partial denture (RPD) and to apply it in vivo.

Methods: A tactile sensor sheet with 100 sensing points and a measuring system (I-SCAN, Nitta, Osaka, Japan) were used. The sensor was calibrated before being applied in vivo.

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