Purpose: Severe anterior maxillary atrophy offers few implant-supported rehabilitation solutions to Quad Zygoma characterized by a wide anterior cantilever. One of the possible alternatives to consider before the quad zygoma is the extra-long nasal/trans-nasal implant placement. This retrospective multicentric study shows the predictability of nasal/transnasal implant placement in patients affected by severe anterior maxilla atrophy, with residual anatomical features that indicate this surgery. This specific remote anchorage can often be safely involved in immediate loading with other remote anchorages, such as zygoma and pterygoid implants. In this rehabilitation, it’s mandatory to reduce the instability of the frameworks and mechanical stress that could unfavorably affect the implant's prognosis due to the overloading derived from anterior bending. Materials and Methods: In this retrospective multicentric study, 52 nasal or trans-nasal implants were inserted in 31 atrophic anterior maxillas (Cawood and Howell's class V-VI). All implants were successful after the healing period; even if 27 nasal implants reached an insertional torque equal to or greater than 50 n/cm2, the threshold value estimated to be able to support an immediate load. Result: All 52 implants were successful, so the proportion of success was 100%, with a 97.5% one-sided confidence interval of 88.8-100%. The success rate is achieved only if at least two of the following criteria are met: 1) a greater torque than 50 Ncm as a minimum sufficient condition to plan immediate loading; 2) after a healing period of 16 weeks, the secondary stability is clinically and radiographically evaluated to exclude possible coronal bone resorption: this condition allows the successive prosthetic finalization; 3) the possibility of carrying out a full arch rehabilitation with minimal anterior spread. Insertion torque was <50 Newton centimeters (Ncm) in 14 patients (45%) and 50 Ncm in 17 (55%). Mechanical load was delayed in the former and immediate in the latter. The proportion of torque <50 Ncm was higher in men than in women (69% versus 28%, p=0.033). Immediate torque was not significantly affected by age. Conclusion: Although the sample is not extremely numerically significant, it conveys a clear and significant clinical, surgical indication as never before in the literature; we can state that nasal/trans nasal implants have been very useful in reducing the anterior cantilever and overcoming the anatomical limitations affecting conventional Quad Zygoma.
Keywords: nasal implants, zygomatic implants, pterygoid implants, anterior cantilever prostheses, severe atrophy