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José Carlos Martins da Rosa, DDS, ist Autor des Buches Immediate Dentoalveolar Restoration: Immediately Loaded Implants in Compromised Sockets (Quintessence Publishing, 2014), erschienen in Portugiesisch, Spanisch, Englisch und Mandarin. Er hat in zahlreichen Fachzeitschriften Beiträge veröffentlicht und hält sowohl auf nationaler als auch auf internationaler Ebene Vorträge über parodontale, prothetische und chirurgische Implantologieverfahren, darunter auch Vorträge in Übersee über die Technik der sofortigen dentoalveolären Restauration. Dr. Rosa führt eine Praxis für Prothetik, Parodontologie und chirurgische Implantologie in Caxias do Sul, Brasilien.
Immediately Loaded Implants in Compromised Sockets
Voraussichtliches Erscheinen: Oktober 2024 2. Auflage 2024 Buch Hardcover; 21.6 x 27.9 cm, 272 Seiten, 1550 Abbildungen Sprache: Englisch Kategorien: Implantologie, Parodontologie ISBN 978-1-64724-171-1 QP USA
Produkt in Vorbereitung.
$228.00
Veranstaltungen
ROX 2024 - the Rosa Experience
Bone and Soft Tissue RegenerationMärz 22, 2024 — März 23, 2024São Paulo, Brasilien
Referenten: José Carlos Martins da Rosa, Fouad Khoury, Istvan Urban, Giovanni Zucchelli
3rd Urban International Hard and Soft Tissue Regeneration Symposium
Predictability in RegenerationOktober 21, 2022 — Oktober 22, 2022Budapest Congress Center, Budapest, Ungarn
Referenten: José Carlos Martins da Rosa, Luca De Stavola, Ueli Grunder, Jaime Lozada, Aušra Ramanauskaitė, Frank Schwarz, Istvan Urban, Giovanni Zucchelli, Otto Zuhr
Urban Regeneration Institute
The 14th International Symposium on Periodontics and Restorative Dentistry (ISPRD)
Juni 9, 2022 — Juni 12, 2022Boston Marriott Copley Place, Boston, MA, Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika
Referenten: Tara Aghaloo, Edward P. Allen, Evanthia Anadioti, Wael Att, Vinay Bhide, Markus Blatz, Scotty Bolding, Lorenzo Breschi, Jeff Brucia, Daniel Buser, Luigi Canullo, Daniele Cardaropoli, Stephen J. Chu, Donald Clem, Christian Coachman, Lyndon F. Cooper, Daniel Cullum, Lee Culp, José Carlos Martins da Rosa, Sergio De Paoli, Marco Degidi, Nicholas Dello Russo, Serge Dibart, Joseph P. Fiorellini, Mauro Fradeani, Stuart J. Froum, David Garber, Maria L. Geisinger, William Giannobile, Luca Gobbato, Ueli Grunder, Galip Gürel, Chad Gwaltney, Christoph Hämmerle, Robert A. Horowitz, Marc Hürzeler, David Kim, Gregg Kinzer, Christopher Köttgen, Ina Köttgen, Purnima S. Kumar, Burton Langer, Lydia Legg, Pascal Magne, Kenneth A. Malament, Jay Malmquist, George Mandelaris, Pamela K. McClain, Michael K. McGuire, Mauro Merli, Konrad H. Meyenberg, Craig M. Misch, Julie A. Mitchell, Marc L. Nevins, Myron Nevins, Michael G. Newman, Miguel A. Ortiz, Jacinthe M. Paquette, Stefano Parma-Benfenati, Michael A. Pikos, Giulio Rasperini, Pamela S. Ray, Christopher R. Richardson, Isabella Rocchietta, Marisa Roncati, Marco Ronda, Paul S. Rosen, Maria Emanuel Ryan, Irena Sailer, Maurice Salama, David M. Sarver, Takeshi Sasaki, Todd Scheyer, Massimo Simion, Michael Sonick, Sergio Spinato, Dennis P. Tarnow, Lorenzo Tavelli, Douglas A. Terry, Tiziano Testori, Carlo Tinti, Istvan Urban, Hom-Lay Wang, Robert Winter, Giovanni Zucchelli
Quintessence Publishing Co., Inc. USA
Zeitschriftenbeiträge dieses Autors
International Journal of Periodontics & Restorative Dentistry, 4/2021
Online OnlySeiten: e183-e190, Sprache: Englischda Rosa, José Carlos Martins / Sotto-Maior, Bruno Salles / Pértile de Oliveira Rosa, Ariádene Cristina / Violin Dias Pereira, Luis Antonio
This report presents a case in which autogenous bone grafts were harvested from the maxillary tuberosity for guided bone regeneration and dental implant placement, with long-term follow-ups and assessment at the clinical, tomographic, and histologic levels. Particulate and block autogenous bone grafts were covered with a resorbable collagen membrane. Advanced bone remodeling and good bone quality, enabling dental implant placement, were observed after a short healing time (3 months). The differences in buccal bone plate thickness in the grafted area between the period immediately after implant placement and 4 years thereafter ranged from +0.879 mm to -0.001 mm. The implants osseointegrated uneventfully, and alveolar bone regeneration remained stable with a satisfactory result after 4 years.
This article describes the combined use of the immediate dentoalveolar restoration (IDR) technique and the osseodensification implant site preparation method to improve immediate implant primary stability in periodontally compromised extraction sites. Positioning of soft and hard tissues was evaluated in two clinical cases in which the IDR technique and the osseodensification implant site preparation method were used to replace teeth at sites with severe alveolar bone loss. The results were analyzed by clinical assessment, photography, radiography, and computed tomography scans. Based on this preliminary study, the use of osseodensification can enhance the results achieved using the IDR technique due to improved primary implant stability, as measured by higher insertion torque.
The aim of this prospective case series was to evaluate the stability of esthetic treatment after single tooth replacement in compromised sockets using the immediate dentoalveolar restoration (IDR) concept. Eighteen patients underwent immediate implant placement and IDR of bone defects. Clinical photographs were used to evaluate the gingival contour and papillae. The mean soft tissue dimensions at baseline and final follow-up were 12.85 ± 2.33 mm and 12.79 ± 2.48 mm, respectively, revealing no recession. The mean mesial and distal papillary heights increased slightly over time. Stable periimplant soft tissues and satisfactory esthetic outcomes were achieved. (Int J Periodontics Restorative Dent 2014;34:199-208. doi: 10.11607/prd.1858)
Purpose: The aim of this paper is to describe a protocol for a one-stage technique called Immediate Dentoalveolar Restoration (IDR), which uses autogenous bone grafts to restore peri-implant bone defects, presenting the results of mid-term follow-up.
Summary: The patient presented a left central incisor that was compromised and with a total loss of buccal bone wall. The proposed treatment followed a protocol of immediate implantation, with a flapless surgery, using corticocancellous bone graft harvested from the maxillary tuberosity to restore the bone defect in question. The graft was shaped to the defect size and inserted between the implant and the remaining buccal soft tissue. The provisional restoration was made at the same time. The patient was followed for 36 months. The results were analyzed by means of clinical assessment, photography, periapical radiography and cone beam computed tomography.
Conclusion: The treatment described appears to afford satisfactory esthetic results, with lower overall costs and treatment time.