Clin Oral
Implants Res. 1999 Feb;10(1):34-44.
Blood supply to the maxillary sinus
relevant to sinus floor elevation procedures.
Solar
P, Geyerhofer U, Traxler H, Windisch A, Ulm C, Watzek G.
Department
of Oral Surgery, Dental School, University of Vienna, Austria.
The maxillary
blood supply is essential for preserving the vitality of the affected
maxillary region, integration of the grafting material, and wound healing
such as following sinus floor elevation. Although it is well established
that edentulous maxillae demonstrate a decreasing vascularity as bone
resorption progresses, the vascular conditions relevant to sinus floor
elevation procedures have not been investigated yet. This study deals
with maxillary arteries relevant to sinus floor elevation surgery and
examines the vascularization of the lateral maxilla after tooth loss.
The vessels of the lateral maxilla of 18 maxillary specimens (10 male,
8 female, mean age 67 years) were prepared anatomically and the local
main arteries, the number of macroscopically discernible branches and
anastomoses, their calibers, and the distance between the caudal main
branches and the alveolar ridge recorded. The lateral maxilla is supplied
by branches of the posterior superior alveolar artery (PSAA) and the
infraorbital artery (IOA) that form an anastomosis in the bony lateral
antral wall, which also supplies the Schneiderian membrane. This intraosseous
anastomosis was found in all of the specimens. Eight of 18 also showed
an extraosseous anastomosis between PSAA and IOA, vestibular to the
antral wall, giving off an average of 3 branches cranially and 5 branches
caudally. The two anastomoses form a double arterial arcade to supply
the lateral antral wall and, partly, the alveolar process. The PSAA
had a mean caliber of 1.6 mm and exhibited an average of 2 endosseous
and 1 extraosseous branches. The IOA had a mean diameter of 1.6 mm and
showed an average of 1 endosseous and 3 extraosseous branches. The mean
distance between the intraosseous anastomosis and the alveolar ridge
was 19 mm in 2 defined measuring sites. Its mean length was 44.6 mm.
The epiperiosteal vestibular anastomosis was situated further cranially
at a mean distance of 23 to 26 mm from the alveolar ridge and had a
mean length of 46 mm. The rather large caliber of the vessels supplying
the lateral antral wall seems to be crucial to the fact that the periosteal
blood supply is maintained even in severe maxillary atrophy and after
complete disappearance of the centro-medullary vessels.
PMID: 10196788
[PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]