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1.
Front Bioeng Biotechnol ; 12: 1454728, 2024.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39161348

RESUMO

Jaw cyst is a fluid-containing cystic lesion that can occur in any part of the jaw and cause facial swelling, dental lesions, jaw fractures, and other associated issues. Due to the diversity and complexity of jaw images, existing deep-learning methods still have challenges in segmentation. To this end, we propose MARes-Net, an innovative multi-scale attentional residual network architecture. Firstly, the residual connection is used to optimize the encoder-decoder process, which effectively solves the gradient disappearance problem and improves the training efficiency and optimization ability. Secondly, the scale-aware feature extraction module (SFEM) significantly enhances the network's perceptual abilities by extending its receptive field across various scales, spaces, and channel dimensions. Thirdly, the multi-scale compression excitation module (MCEM) compresses and excites the feature map, and combines it with contextual information to obtain better model performance capabilities. Furthermore, the introduction of the attention gate module marks a significant advancement in refining the feature map output. Finally, rigorous experimentation conducted on the original jaw cyst dataset provided by Quzhou People's Hospital to verify the validity of MARes-Net architecture. The experimental data showed that precision, recall, IoU and F1-score of MARes-Net reached 93.84%, 93.70%, 86.17%, and 93.21%, respectively. Compared with existing models, our MARes-Net shows its unparalleled capabilities in accurately delineating and localizing anatomical structures in the jaw cyst image segmentation.

2.
BMC Oral Health ; 24(1): 560, 2024 May 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38745168

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Solitary Bone Cyst (SBC), also known as a simple bone cyst, hemorrhagic cyst, or traumatic cyst is classified by the WHO among non-odontogenic benign lesions of the jaw. The article explores the use of a static 3D-printed surgical guide to treat mandibular SBC, emphasizing a minimally surgical approach for this lesion. CASE PRESENTATION: A 20-year-old woman was referred for a persistent mandibular SBC lacuna, without specific complaints. Her medical history included a previous bone trepanation for a SBC in the same area, radiologically and surgically confirmed. X-ray assessment showed a well-defined unilocular radiolucency surrounding the root of the first left lower molar (tooth #36), measuring 10 × 10 mm. Pulp sensitivity was normal. CBCT data and STL files of dental cast were obtained preoperatively and registered. A 3D-printed surgical guide was used for minimally invasive trepanation of the buccal cortical. The simulation used a targeted endodontic microsurgery approach in order to determine axis and diameter of the trephine. Surgery was performed under local anesthesia. The guide was tooth supported integrating tubes and a fork for guiding precise trepanation. A 3.5 mm round bone window was created, leaving an empty cavity confirming SBC diagnosis and permitting bone curettage. A blood clot was obtained to promote bone healing. Complete reossification was observed after 6 months. The follow-up at 2 years confirmed a complete bone healing with normal pulp sensitivity. DISCUSSION: The 3D-printed windowed surgical guide with dental support offers big advantages, including improved visibility and reduced errors. Compared to traditional guides, it eliminates visual hindrance and allows easier and quick access to confined areas as well as an improved irrigation during drilling process. The article also highlights the importance of preoperative planning while acknowledging potential limitations and errors and surgical complications. CONCLUSION: The use of the 3D-printed surgical guide could be used in routine for minimally invasive intervention of SBC. This case also demonstrates the potential utility of this approach in various procedures in oral and maxillofacial surgery. The technique provides precise localization, reducing complications and enhances operative efficiency.


Assuntos
Procedimentos Cirúrgicos Minimamente Invasivos , Impressão Tridimensional , Humanos , Feminino , Procedimentos Cirúrgicos Minimamente Invasivos/métodos , Adulto Jovem , Tomografia Computadorizada de Feixe Cônico , Doenças Mandibulares/cirurgia , Doenças Mandibulares/diagnóstico por imagem , Cistos Maxilomandibulares/cirurgia , Cistos Maxilomandibulares/diagnóstico por imagem
3.
J Stomatol Oral Maxillofac Surg ; : 101892, 2024 Apr 24.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38670344

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: The treatment of medium-sized odontogenic jaw cysts is inconsistent at present. Two main treatments, namely decompression and enucleation, are used overlappingly. This retrospective analysis aims to provide useful references for technique selection for future management of medium-sized odontogenic jaw cysts. METHODS: Odontogenic cysts with lesion sizes ranging 2-4 cm were included. The clinical and radiological data of the patients were reviewed. Decompression-first and direct enucleation treatments were the two main surgical techniques. The preoperative parameters and postoperative outcomes were compared between the two groups. RESULTS: Out of 69 patients included, 40 (58 %) were in the decompression group and 29 (42 %) in direct enucleation group. The logistic regression analysis of preoperative parameters demonstrated that the maximum lesion size and the chief surgeon's preference could affect the selection of surgical techniques for medium-sized cysts (P < 0.05). Receiver operating characteristic curve analyses demonstrated that a lesion size >2.5 cm was the best cutoff value for predicting a decompression selection. Most postoperative outcomes differed significantly between the two groups (P < 0.05). Lower-risk anesthesia, shorter hospitalization, tooth function protection, and fewer neurosensory impairments were decompression-favoring outcomes. However, more follow-up visits, more postoperative X-rays, and longer postoperative care were outcomes against decompression. The recurrence rate was low and did not differ significantly between the two groups (P > 0.05). CONCLUSIONS: There is no apparent preference for treating medium-sized jaw cysts. The maximum lesion size is a moderate-impact factor for treatment selection. A tendency to prefer decompression-first with larger lesion size was found in medium-sized jaw cysts. The advantages of teeth preservation and low neurosensory impairment of decompression were verified in the medium-size jaw cysts. The burden of postoperative care should be considered when selecting decompression.

4.
J Clin Med ; 13(5)2024 Mar 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38592423

RESUMO

Jaw cysts represent a great matter of interest in oral and maxillofacial surgery. Jaw cyst surgery is a common intervention in oral surgery but, in the case of a multidisciplinary patient, the oral surgeon needs to meet with other specialists. A cyst is an epithelium-lined sac containing fluid and/or semisolid material due to epithelial cell proliferation, degeneration, and liquefaction; the hypertonic solution withdraws liquids from the surrounding tissues, while internal pressure exerts an equal strength on the cyst walls. Dentigerous cysts are the second most common odontogenic cysts after radicular cysts, and commonly few or no symptoms are reported. However, the most common diagnosis for dentigerous cyst is represented by eruption of the affected tooth or accidental diagnosis. Commonly, dentigerous cysts may be related to impacted third molars; in the case of impacted third molars and a dentigerous cyst, the tooth should be removed along with the cyst in the same intervention. Mandibular dentigerous cysts are common in children and adults, while dentigerous cysts are a rare neoformation in elderly patients. Treatment usually involves removal of the entire cyst and the associated unerupted tooth. This intervention may be more difficult if the cyst is large, the third molar is in contact with the mandibular nerve, and/or the patient has a medical history that may represent a relative or absolute contraindication. We present the case of a rare symptomatic manifestation of dentigerous cyst in an elderly patient in treatment with dabigatran therapy; for the treatment of dentigerous cysts in the elderly, we suggest a multidisciplinary approach with the use of the histological examination and a careful follow-up.

5.
Math Biosci Eng ; 21(3): 4036-4055, 2024 Feb 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38549317

RESUMO

Jaw cysts are mainly caused by abnormal tooth development, chronic oral inflammation, or jaw damage, which may lead to facial swelling, deformity, tooth loss, and other symptoms. Due to the diversity and complexity of cyst images, deep-learning algorithms still face many difficulties and challenges. In response to these problems, we present a horizontal-vertical interaction and multiple side-outputs network for cyst segmentation in jaw images. First, the horizontal-vertical interaction mechanism facilitates complex communication paths in the vertical and horizontal dimensions, and it has the ability to capture a wide range of context dependencies. Second, the feature-fused unit is introduced to adjust the network's receptive field, which enhances the ability of acquiring multi-scale context information. Third, the multiple side-outputs strategy intelligently combines feature maps to generate more accurate and detailed change maps. Finally, experiments were carried out on the self-established jaw cyst dataset and compared with different specialist physicians to evaluate its clinical usability. The research results indicate that the Matthews correlation coefficient (Mcc), Dice, and Jaccard of HIMS-Net were 93.61, 93.66 and 88.10% respectively, which may contribute to rapid and accurate diagnosis in clinical practice.


Assuntos
Cistos , Humanos , Cistos/diagnóstico por imagem , Algoritmos , Comunicação , Inflamação , Processamento de Imagem Assistida por Computador
6.
Artigo em Espanhol | LILACS-Express | LILACS | ID: biblio-1558174

RESUMO

Los quistes de los maxilares son las lesiones óseas más comunes en la región maxilofacial. La enucleación de las lesiones y el cierre primario de los defectos, son en conjunto, el tratamiento óptimo hoy en día. En algunas ocasiones el defecto óseo resultante puede ser de un tamaño tan grande que afecta la estabilidad de dientes vecinos, comprometa la indemnidad del hueso o produce un retraso cicatrizal que incluso puede impedir una regeneración ósea completa. Se considera que esta falta de regeneración expone al paciente a riesgos de infección tardía, retraso de los tratamientos rehabilitadores en zonas de alta demanda estética y pérdida de vitalidad dentaria. Para disminuir el riesgo de alteraciones en la regeneración ósea completa de cavidades quísticas, se ha propuesto la posibilidad de que tras la enucleación del quiste se rellenen estos defectos con injertos óseos u otras técnicas de preservación alveolar para favorecer la cicatrización. Teóricamente el uso de estos injertos mejora la calidad y disminuye el tiempo de cicatrización ósea, permitiendo que el paciente recupere rápidamente las funciones habituales del componente dentoalveolar, acortando el periodo de cuidados postoperatorios que restringen la alimentación, los deportes o la rehabilitación oral. El actual trabajo tiene como objetivo realizar una revisión de la literatura respecto a los beneficios del uso de injertos óseos en el tratamiento quirúrgico de los quistes maxilares y presentar un caso clínico con los detalles quirúrgicos de esta técnica.


Jaw cysts are the most common bone lesions in the maxillofacial region. Enucleation of the lesions along with the primary closure of the defects are the optimal treatment nowadays. On some occasions, the resulting bone defect can be so large that it affects the stability of neighboring teeth, compromises the integrity of the bone, or produces a delayed healing that can even prevent complete bone regeneration. It is considered that the lack of regeneration exposes the patient to risk of infection, delay of rehabilitation treatments in areas of high aesthetic demand and loss of dental vitality. To reduce the risk of alterations in complete bone regeneration of cystic cavities, the possibility of filling these defects with bone grafts or other alveolar preservation techniques to promote healing, has been proposed after cyst enucleation. Theoretically, the use of these grafts improves the quality and decreases the bone healing time, allowing the patient to quickly recover the usual functions of the dentoalveolar component, limiting the period of postoperative care that restricts eating, sports or oral rehabilitation. The present work aims to carry out a review of the literature regarding the benefits of the use of bone grafts in the surgical treatment of maxillary cysts and to present a clinical case with the surgical details of this technique.

7.
Artigo em Inglês | LILACS-Express | LILACS | ID: biblio-1558178

RESUMO

The glandular odontogenic cyst (GOC) is a pathological entity that most commonly develops in the anterior region of the mandible and can emulate other lesions, including other cysts, odontogenic tumors, and even malignant lesions of glandular origin. Therefore, the aim of this manuscript is to report a new case of GOC treated conservatively and to discuss its clinical, radiological, histopathological, and therapeutic aspects.


El quiste odontogénico glandular (QOG) es una entidad patológica que se desarrolla con mayor frecuencia en la región anterior de la mandíbula y que puede mimetizar otras lesiones incluyendo otros quistes, tumores odontogénicos y hasta lesiones malignas de origen glandular. Por lo tanto, el objetivo del presente manuscrito es reportar un nuevo caso de QOG tratado de forma conservadora y discutir sus aspectos clínicos, imagenológicos, anatomopatológicos y terapéuticos.

8.
Oral Radiol ; 40(2): 259-268, 2024 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38112919

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to assess the accuracy of formula-based volume measurements and the 3D volume analysis with different software packages in the calculation of preoperative cystic jaw lesions' volume. The secondary aim was to assess the reliability and the accuracy of 3 imaging software programs for measuring the cystic jaw lesions' volume in CBCT images. MATERIALS AND METHODS: This study consisted of two parts: an in vitro part using 2 dry human mandibles that were used to create simulated osteolytic lesions to assess the accuracy of the volumetric analysis and formula-based volume. As a gold standard, the volume of each bone defect was determined by taking an impression using rapid soft silicone (Vinylight) and then quantifying the volume of the replica. Afterward, each tooth socket was scanned using a high-resolution CBCT. A retrospective part using archived CBCT radiographs that were taken from the database of the outpatient clinic of the oral and maxillofacial radiology department, Faculty of Dentistry, Minia University to assess the reliability of the 3 software packages. The volumetric data set was exported for volume quantification using the 3 software packages (MIMICS-OnDemand and InVesalius software). Also, the three greatest orthogonal diameters of the lesions were calculated, and the volume was assessed using the ellipsoid formula. Dunn's test was used for pair-wise comparisons when Friedman's test was significant. The inter-examiner agreement was assessed using Cronbach's alpha reliability coefficient and intra-class correlation coefficient. RESULTS: Regarding the results of the retrospective part, there was a statistically significant difference between volumetric measurements by equation and different software (P value < 0.001, Effect size = 0.513). The inter-observer reliability of the measurements of the cystic lesions using the different software packages was very good. The highest inter-examiner agreement for volume measurement was found with InVesalius (Cronbach's alpha = 0.992). On the other hand, there was a statistically significant difference between dry mandible volumetric measurements and Gold Standard. All software showed statistically significantly lower dry mandible volumetric measurements than the gold standard. CONCLUSION: Computer-aided assessment of cystic lesion volume using InVesalius, OnDemand, and MIMICS is a readily available, easy to use, non-invasive option. It confers an advantage over formula-based volume as it gives the exact morphology of the lesion so that potential problems can be detected before surgery. Volume analysis with InVesalius software was accurate in determining the volume of simulated periapical defects in a human cadaver mandible as compared to true volume. InVesalius software proved that open-source software can be robust yet user-friendly with the advantage of minimal cost to use.


Assuntos
Tomografia Computadorizada de Feixe Cônico , Software , Humanos , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes , Estudos Retrospectivos , Mandíbula/diagnóstico por imagem
9.
Dent J (Basel) ; 11(12)2023 Dec 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38132419

RESUMO

Paradental cyst (PC) is an uncommon type of odontogenic cyst of inflammatory origin, which develops near the cervical margin of the outside of the root of a vital tooth. The category of paradental cyst includes the buccal bifurcation cyst, which is found in the buccal area adjacent to the mandibular first or second molars in children. A conclusive diagnosis of a PC needs to correlate the surgical, radiographic, and histologic findings. When strict diagnosis is neglected, they can be easily misdiagnosed and mistreated. PCs associated with mandibular first and second molars and those associated with the mandibular third molar may have slightly different clinical manifestations but have almost completely different treatment principles due to the distinction in location. For the third molars, removal of both the tooth and the cyst is preferred. However, when the first or second molars are affected, it may be advisable to perform enucleation of the lesion while preserving the associated tooth. There are also more conservative methods to retain vital permanent teeth within the mandibular arch. Additionally, the cyst wall primarily consisted of granulation tissue firmly attached to the periodontal ligament space. The exact origin of these cysts was a subject of ongoing debate, but they were believed to primarily arise from either the reduced enamel epithelium or the inflammatory proliferation of junctional/sulcular epithelium, which originate from the superficial mucosa during tooth eruption. The aim of the present review was to update information on clinical manifestations, diagnosis and treatment strategies of cysts and discuss their pathogenic mechanisms. Raising familiarity with the distinctive features is beneficial for accurately diagnosing these lesions and effectively caring for the patients.

10.
J Stomatol Oral Maxillofac Surg ; 125(4): 101731, 2023 Dec 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38097014

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Jaw cysts often deeply involve adjacent tooth roots, making it difficult to preserve them. The purpose of this retrospective study was to investigate the effectiveness of an intentional replantation (IR) strategy combined with cyst enucleation in preserving cyst-involved teeth during jaw cyst removal. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Fifteen patients with jaw cysts and deeply involved teeth were treated with IR and cyst enucleation. All patients received root canal therapy prior to surgery, except for one patient who received it during surgery. The involved teeth were extracted, and the root surface was carefully cleaned before IR and cyst enucleation. Patients were followed up for 12-14 months, with indicators including clinical complaints, replanted tooth stability, and root resorption. RESULTS: No cyst recurrence was observed, and all replanted teeth survived with good local gingival condition and no marked swelling or recession. Radiographic findings showed clear periodontal space surrounding the replanted teeth. One replanted tooth exhibited slight root resorption due to occlusal trauma, but the resorption ceased after occlusal adjustment. CONCLUSIONS: IR combined with cyst enucleation is an effective strategy for thoroughly cleaning jaw cysts and preserving teeth involved in the cyst.

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