Complete Spontaneous Bone Regeneration Following Partial Mandibulectomy
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Ghana medical journal
Abstract
Bone formation in small deposits following the loss of
part of the mandible has often been reported in the literature,
but reports of complete bone regeneration extending
over the entire anterior mandible from angle to
angle is rare. Even rarer, are reports on the behaviour
of such new bone in terms of facial development, over
a long term and the effect of load carrying on it. Presented
here is an unusual case of bone regeneration
after resection of a large portion of the mandible in a
12 year-old female patient with ameloblastoma in the
anterior mandible. Inter-maxillary fixation, bone grafting,
or insertion of any kind of implant was not employed.
Spontaneous bone regeneration was noted six
weeks after surgery, and the entire resected portion of
the mandible completely regenerated when the patient
was seen again six years later. Mandibular growth was
not significantly affected and thirteen years after her
treatment, including five years of partial denture usage
over the new bone, the shape of the mandible is satisfactory
without any evidence of bone resorption. The
periosteum was totally preserved, perhaps accounting
for the complete bone regeneration and normal mandibular
growth and form.
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