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Piezosurgery versus Rotatory Osteotomy in Mandibular Impacted Third Molar Extraction

The aim of this study is to compare piezoelectric surgery versus rotatory osteotomy technique in removal of mandibular impacted third molar. Sample size of 30 patients 18 males, 12 females with a mean age of 27.43 ± 5.27. Bilateral extractions were required in all patients. All the patients were ran...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Annals of maxillofacial surgery 2017-01, Vol.7 (1), p.5-10
Main Authors: Bhati, Bharat, Kukreja, Pankaj, Kumar, Sanjeev, Rathi, Vidhi C, Singh, Kanika, Bansal, Shipra
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:The aim of this study is to compare piezoelectric surgery versus rotatory osteotomy technique in removal of mandibular impacted third molar. Sample size of 30 patients 18 males, 12 females with a mean age of 27.43 ± 5.27. Bilateral extractions were required in all patients. All the patients were randomly allocated to two groups in one group, namely control group, surgical extraction of mandibular third molar was done using conventional rotatory osteotomy and in the other group, namely test group, extraction of lower third molar was done using Piezotome. Parameters assessed in this study were - mouth opening (interincisal opening), pain (visual analog scale VAS score), swelling, incidence of dry socket, paresthesia and duration of surgery in both groups at baseline, 1 , 3 , and 7 postoperative day. Comparing both groups pain scores with ( < 0.05) a statistically significant difference was found between two groups. Mean surgical time was longer for piezosurgery group (51.40 ± 17.9) minutes compared to the conventional rotatory group with a mean of (37.33 ± 15.5) minutes showing a statistically significant difference ( = 0.002). The main advantages of piezosurgery include soft tissue protection, optimal visibility in the surgical field, decreased blood loss, less vibration and noise, increased comfort for the patient, and protection of tooth structures. Therefore, the piezoelectric device was efficient in decreasing the short-term outcomes of pain and swelling although taking longer duration than conventional rotatory technique it significantly reduces the associated postoperative sequelae of third molar surgery.
ISSN:2231-0746
2249-3816
DOI:10.4103/ams.ams_38_16