Enucleation combined with guided bone regeneration in small and medium-sized odontogenic jaw cysts.

World J Clin Cases

Department of Oral Surgery, Shanghai Ninth People's Hospital, Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine; College of Stomatology, Shanghai Jiao Tong University; National Center for Stomatology; National Clinical Research Center for Oral Diseases; Shanghai Key Laboratory of Stomatology, Shanghai 200011, China.

Published: March 2022

Background: The odontogenic jaw cyst is a cavity containing liquid, semifluid or gaseous components, with the development of the disease. In recent years, with the rapid development of oral materials and the transformation of treatment of jaw cysts, more options are available for treatment of postoperative bone defect of jaw cysts. Guided bone regeneration (GBR) places biomaterials in the bone defect, and then uses biofilm to separate the proliferative soft tissue and the slow-growing bone tissue to maintain the space for bone regeneration, which is widely used in the field of implantology.

Aim: To observe the clinical effect of GBR in repairing bone defect after enucleation of small and medium-sized odontogenic jaw cysts.

Methods: From June 2018 to September 2020, 13 patients (7 male, 6 female) with odontogenic jaw cysts were treated in the Department of Oral Surgery, Ninth People's Hospital, Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine. Adults without hypertension, heart disease, diabetes or other systemic diseases were selected. The diagnosis was based on the final pathological results: 11 cases were diagnosed as apical cysts, one as primordial cyst, and one as dentigerous cyst. The lesions were located in the maxilla in seven cases, and in the mandible in six cases. All cases were treated with the same method of enucleation combined with GBR.

Results: Three to four months after the operation, the boundary between the implant site and the surrounding normal stroma was not obvious in patients with small-sized odontogenic jaw cysts. The patients with tooth defects were treated with implant after 6 mo. For the patients with medium-sized odontogenic jaw cysts, the density of the center of the implant area was close to the normal mass at 6 mo after surgery, and there was a clear boundary between the periphery of the implant area and the normal mass. The boundary between the periphery of the implant area and the normal mass was blurred at 8-9 mo after surgery. Patients with tooth defects were treated with implants at > 6 mo after the operation.

Conclusion: Enucleation combined with guided bone regeneration in small and medium-sized odontogenic jaw cysts can shorten the time of osteogenesis, increase the amount of new bone formation, reduce complications, and improve quality of life.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8968821PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.12998/wjcc.v10.i9.2764DOI Listing

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