Nishioka, Renato Sussumu [UNESP]Souza, Francisley Avila [UNESP]2014-05-202014-05-202009-01-01Journal of Oral Implantology. Lawrence: Allen Press Inc, v. 35, n. 6, p. 289-294, 2009.0160-6972http://hdl.handle.net/11449/22806The purpose of this study was to observe the clinical outcome of bone spreading and standardized dilation of horizontally resorbed bone during immediate implant placement using a "screw-type" configuration of expansion and threadformers. Fifty-three patients were included in this study, and 41 edentulous areas in anterior and posterior maxillas were treated. Sixty-eight implants were placed using an insertion torque of at least 40 Ncm. Abutments were delivered 4 to 6 months after implant placement. The overall failure percentage was 4.41% (3 failures). A retrieved analysis of I implant removed at 3 years after placement demonstrated bone resorption down to the level of the third thread. The bone spreader technique is different from Summers' osteotome, both in clinical use and in armamentarium. The main advantage of the crest-expanding technique is that it is a less invasive procedure; the facial wall expands after the medullary bone is compressed against the cortical wall. Within the limits of this preliminary study, the cumulative survival rate for this method of implant placement is 95.58% at 3 years. This study confirms that a bone spreader used in the maxilla shows an unusually low failure rate after 3 years.289-294engspreaderthreadformerridge expansionsingle-stage surgeryBONE SPREADER TECHNIQUE: A PRELIMINARY 3-YEAR STUDYArtigo10.1563/1548-1336-35.6.289WOS:000273053500004Acesso aberto00566608422843970000-0002-1458-601X