𝔖 Bobbio Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

Variation in arterial supply to the floor of the mouth and assessment of relative hemorrhage risk in implant surgery

✍ Scribed by Yuji Katsumi; Ray Tanaka; Takafumi Hayashi; Taketo Koga; Ritsuo Takagi; Hayato Ohshima


Book ID
109350957
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2011
Tongue
English
Weight
957 KB
Volume
24
Category
Article
ISSN
0905-7161

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Objectives

Bleeding in the floor of the mouth during implant surgery is attributed to arterial injuries in the sublingual space: clinicians may injure the submental and sublingual arteries, which originate from the facial and lingual arteries, respectively. This study aimed to clarify the three‐dimensional courses of submental and sublingual arteries and their topographic relation to the mandible.

Materials and methods

During the gross anatomy course at the Faculty of Dentistry and Graduate School, Niigata University (2009–2011), we investigated the relationship between the courses of submental and sublingual arteries and their dividing patterns of the mylohyoid muscle, sublingual gland, and mandible using 27 human cadavers.

Results

The courses of submental and sublingual arteries were divided into four patterns: (1) the sublingual space was supplied by the sublingual artery (type I: 63%), (2) it was supplied by both the sublingual and submental arteries (type II: 5.6%), (3) it was supplied by the submental artery without the sublingual artery (type III: 29.6%), and (4) type III without the deep lingual artery originated from the lingual artery (type IV: 1.8%). In type II, III, and IV, the submental artery perforates the mylohyoid muscle or takes a roundabout route to travel near the surface of the mandible. The percentage occurrence of arteries traveling between the sublingual gland and mandible in type II, III, and IV (55%) is higher than that in type I (8.8%).

Conclusion

Susceptibility of the submental artery in type II, III, and IV to injury during implant surgery is suggested.


πŸ“œ SIMILAR VOLUMES