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Study on the Risk of Inferior Alveolar Nerve Damage During Lower Third Molar Surgery

U

University of Roma La Sapienza

Status

Completed

Conditions

Mandibular Nerve Injury

Treatments

Procedure: lower third molar extraction

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

Objective The present study aimed to evaluate which factors were statistically associated with a greater probability of inferior alveolar nerve (IAN) damage during lower third molar surgery.

Study Design A prospective observational study was performed at the Oral Surgery Unit of the Umberto I Hospital on 92 patients which underwent surgical extraction of a lower third molar, that was radiographically overlapped to the mandibular canal. All surgeries were performed by the same expert surgeon. A principal component analysis and the exact two-tailed Fisher test were used.

Full description

Exclusion criteria were the following:

  • lower third molar buds;
  • lack of contiguous second molar;
  • wide cyst-like areas or severe osteo-metabolic/tumor pathologies associated with the lower third molar;
  • pre-operative neurosensory deficit related to IAN on the side where surgery was to be performed.

Clinical and radiographic data were noted on a special chart, developed in four areas concerning the patient's personal data, pre-operative case evaluation, surgical technique, and post-operative course.

Assessment of surgical difficulty was reached using a modified Pederson's scale by assigning a 1 to 3 score to each of the following variables: tooth inclination (mesioangular/vertical = 1; horizontal = 2; distoangular = 3), depth of impaction (modified Winter classification: A/B = 1; C1 = 2; C 2= 3), Pell & Gregory class (I = 1; II = 2; III = 3), root morphology (fused or slightly divergent = 1; strongly divergent = 2; presence of apical anomalies = 3), proximity to the IAN (none = 1; contiguity = 2; embrication = 3) and maximum mouth opening (> 4 cm = 1; 3-4 cm = 2; < 3 cm = 3). For each extracted third molar, a total score between 6 and 18 was therefore obtained.

All surgeries were performed by the same expert surgeon (RP), with the buccal approach using local anesthesia, and included the following maneuvers:

  • luxation of the coronal portion of the tooth/root in an ipsilateral or parallel direction with respect to the IAN position and running, in order to minimize nerve compression;
  • post-extraction residual bone cavity inspection using a Zeiss 4x300 magnification optical system to better identify intra-operative nerve exposure.

No material was inserted into the residual cavity, neither by regeneration nor by haemostasis.

After one week, sensitivity was tested on both sides with the tactile test using a 27-gauge needle tip and, if a difference was found, the patient was followed up once a week for the first month and every two weeks thereafter, until he/she reported to perceive the pin-prick test in the affected side the same way as the healthy side.

Enrollment

92 patients

Sex

All

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • orthopantomographic superimposition between the lower third molar and at least the upper half of the mandibular canal, associated or not with the presence of one or more radiographic signs of proximity among those proposed by Rood and Shehab (1990):
  • 3-dimensional radiographic examination with a CT software;
  • any type of lower third molar impaction.

Exclusion criteria

  • lower third molar buds;
  • lack of contiguous second molar;
  • wide cyst-like areas or severe osteo-metabolic/tumor pathologies associated with the lower third molar;
  • pre-operative neurosensory deficit related to IAN on the side where surgery was to be performed.

Trial contacts and locations

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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