Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Paolo Toti is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Paolo Toti.


International Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery | 2009

Volume changes of autogenous bone grafts after alveolar ridge augmentation of atrophic maxillae and mandibles

Ludovico Sbordone; Paolo Toti; GiovanBattista Menchini-Fabris; Carolina Sbordone; Pasquale Piombino; F. Guidetti

The aim of the present retrospective chart review was to determine the relationship between nonvascularized osseous graft remodeling and the three-dimensional (3D) features of grafts and recipient sites, the anatomical recipient regions and different graft sources. 32 iliac crest or chin grafts were onlay-positioned in the mandible or maxilla of 14 patients. CT scans, taken before implant positioning and after 1 year, revealed a mean volume resorption of 35-51%. For iliac crest grafts, the average resorption was 42% when the onlay was positioned in the anterior maxilla and 59% when it was positioned in the posterior mandible. Spearman correlation and 3D interpolation analysis revealed, for both iliac crest groups, a moderate or advanced remodeling pattern depending on 3D features, namely graft thickness and shape, basal bone volume of recipient site, and the basal bone/graft volume ratio of the recipient site. No statistically significant differences were found between the recipient and donor site groups. Retrospective analysis of the data indicates that iliac crest grafts, onlay-positioned on adequate basal bone volume, may register a reduced volume remodeling when shaped thick in the anterior maxilla or rounded and convex, on the external surface, in the posterior mandible.


Journal of Cranio-maxillofacial Surgery | 2013

Volume changes of autogenous bone after sinus lifting and grafting procedures: A 6-year computerized tomographic follow-up

Carolina Sbordone; Paolo Toti; Franco Guidetti; Luigi Califano; Pantaleo Bufo; Ludovico Sbordone

OBJECTIVES To evaluate long-term bone remodelling of autografts over time (annually, for 6 years), comparing the block and particulate bone procedures for sinus floor elevation, as well as to evaluate the survival of positioned dental implants. PATIENTS AND METHODS Twenty-three sinus lift procedures with autogenous bone were performed: seven sinus lift procedures using particulate graft and 10 with block autogenous bone were performed in 17 patients. Employing a software program, pre- and post-surgical computerized tomography (CT) scans were used to compare the volume (V) and density (D) of inlay grafts over time (up to 6 years), and to determine the percentage of remaining bone (%R). All variable (V, D and %R) measurements were then compared statistically. RESULTS At the 6-year survey for block form, a resorption of 21.5% was seen, whereas for particulate grafts there was a resorption of 39.2%. Both groups exhibited bone remodelling between the first and second follow-up which was significant regarding volume for the block form and regarding density for the particulate group. CONCLUSIONS During the initial period of healing, the cortico-cancellous block bone grafted into the maxillary sinus underwent a negative remodelling of the volume, which is most probably due to graft cortex resorption, coupled with, primarily, an increase in density in the spongious area; for the particulate grafts, significant augmentations in density were obtained. The lack of significant differences among volumes was due to the wide degree of dispersion of the data. The rough data presented in this paper seem to support the use of a bone-block grafting procedure in maxillary sinus augmentation.


Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery | 2012

Volume Changes of Iliac Crest Autogenous Bone Grafts After Vertical and Horizontal Alveolar Ridge Augmentation of Atrophic Maxillas and Mandibles: A 6-Year Computerized Tomographic Follow-Up

Carolina Sbordone; Paolo Toti; Franco Guidetti; Luigi Califano; Angela Santoro; Ludovico Sbordone

PURPOSE To evaluate by computerized tomography the long-term volume resorption of autogenous corticocancellous grafted bone harvested from the ilium and used in an alveolar augmentation procedure followed by endosseous dental implant placement. PATIENTS AND METHODS Eleven maxillary grafts (8 positioned horizontally) and 13 mandibular grafts (10 positioned vertically) were placed in 16 patients. Using software programs, pre- and postsurgical computerized tomographic scans were used to compare volumes of grafts over time (up to 6 yr) to determine the annual percentage of remaining bone and the overall percentage of bone resorption that could be expected. Yearly measurements of volumes and percentages of remaining bone were then compared statistically. RESULTS At the 6-year survey for blocks grafted in the mandible, an average resorption rate of 87% was obtained; for maxillary grafts at the same survey, complete resorption of the grafts (mean, 105.5%) was recorded. In general, bone resorption appeared slow, except for that recorded in the first 2 years of healing, the only period in which statistical comparisons among all time points showed significant differences for all variables. CONCLUSIONS Volumetric measurements of the grafts and their related percentages of remaining bone attested to a progressive and unavoidable bone resorption of almost all the grafted bone in the maxilla and mandible. Although the present data were from a heterogeneous group of defects treated with horizontal and vertical procedures, clinicians, when performing alveolar bone augmentation with an autogenous hip bone, should aim at titanium dental implant osseointegration, not only in the augmented bone but also in the native bone below the graft.


Journal of Periodontology | 2014

Extraction Socket Healing in Humans After Ridge Preservation Techniques: Comparison Between Flapless and Flapped Procedures in a Randomized Clinical Trial

Antonio Barone; Paolo Toti; Adriano Piattelli; Giovanna Iezzi; Giacomo Derchi; Ugo Covani

BACKGROUND The preservation of hard and soft tissue volume, partially lost after tooth removal, can potentially reduce the need for the more demanding augmentation procedures used in implant-supported rehabilitation. The objective of this research study is to investigate the effect of filling with xenogeneic material the postextractive sockets of two surgical procedures (flapless versus flapped). METHODS In this prospective randomized clinical survey, two types of socket preservation were performed on two groups of patients: the control, treated via full-thickness mucoperiosteal flap, and the test, via a flapless procedure. Anatomic measurements and related outcome variables at the third month were analyzed using multiway analysis of variance. Multiple comparison tests, using Tukey honestly significant difference test, and appropriate pairwise comparison tests for independent samples were carried out. RESULTS Sixty-four patients were treated, 32 for each of the two socket preservation procedures. Statistically significant differences were registered for the output variables -- changes in width of keratinized gingiva, changes in bucco-lingual width, and vertical bone changes at four sites -- between the two socket preservation techniques, with P values of <0.001, <0.001, and 0.0105, respectively. CONCLUSIONS A full-thickness mucoperiosteal flap gave significantly more negative results than that of the less-demanding flapless procedure, with an increased width resorption of the postextraction site. Moreover, the increased value of the keratinized gingival width attested to the positive outcome of a flapless procedure in terms of soft tissue preservation and improvement. On the other hand, the flapped technique seemed to show less vertical bone resorption on the buccal aspect than the flapless technique.


Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery | 2011

Volume Changes of Grafted Autogenous Bone in Sinus Augmentation Procedure

Carolina Sbordone; Ludovico Sbordone; Paolo Toti; Ranieri Martuscelli; Luigi Califano; Franco Guidetti

PURPOSE To evaluate associations between the osseous remodeling and the 3-dimensional features of both the grafted bone and the recipient site, as well as the density of the grafted bone, and to assess the relation between the degree of bone resorption and the type of autogenous bone-grafting procedure or the source (block or particulate bone from iliac crest or block bone from chin). PATIENTS AND METHODS A retrospective chart review of patients receiving sinus lifting and grafting procedures for implant positioning was conducted: radiographic analysis of the volume and area of both sinuses and autogenous bone grafts was performed, as per Smolka et al and Krennmair et al. The volumetric remodeling--measured at 1 year after implant positioning as the percentage of residual bone (%R)--was correlated, with Spearman analysis, to 3-dimensional features of both graft and recipient sites. All quantities correlated with %R at a statistically significant level were used for 2-dimensional and multidimensional visualizations with scattergrams. RESULTS Twenty-five iliac crest or chin grafts were inlay positioned in the maxillary sinuses of patients. Computed tomography scans, taken before implant positioning and after 1 year, showed a 1-year negligible volume remodeling for block graft from chin (97.9%) but slightly greater resorption values (%R) for particulate and block grafts from iliac crest (93.8% and 83.3%, respectively). Three- and four-dimensional scattergrams of significant data resulting from Spearman correlation tests (particulate and block grafts both from iliac crest) showed a variation of the remodeling pattern dependent on 3-dimensional features, namely inlay graft thickness, surface area of the graft in contact with basal bone, volume of the recipient site, and surface area of the graft projecting into the sinus cavity. CONCLUSIONS Retrospective data analysis shows that iliac crest grafts positioned on a small basal bone volume (≤ 2.5 mL) may point to a very favorable remodeling of the volume when the particulate graft is molded to a thickness of less than 4 mm, with a reduced surface area protruding into the sinus (≤ 5 cm(2)). Bone blocks with a reduced contact surface and with basal bone (≤ 4 cm(2)) also display minimal resorption.


Clinical Implant Dentistry and Related Research | 2016

The Effect of Insertion Torque on the Clinical Outcome of Single Implants: A Randomized Clinical Trial

Antonio Barone; Fortunato Alfonsi; Giacomo Derchi; Paolo Tonelli; Paolo Toti; Saverio Marchionni; Ugo Covani

BACKGROUND The insertion torque value has been extensively used as an indicator for implant primary stability, which is considered a determining parameter for the implants success. PURPOSE The primary goal of the present randomized clinical trial was to evaluate and compare the clinical outcome for implants placed with high insertion torque (between 50 Ncm and 100 Ncm) and regular insertion torque (within 50 Ncm) in healed ridges. MATERIALS AND METHODS Partially edentulous patients, missing one or more mandibular or maxillary teeth, having an adequate amount of bone, requiring implant placement, were randomized to receive Blossom CT implants with regular insertion torque (<50 Ncm) or CT implants with high insertion torque (≥50 Ncm). Implants were left to heal submerged for 3 months. Implants were restored with individualized abutments and cemented metal-ceramic crowns. Acquired measurements were: insertion torque values (IT), thickness of buccal bone plate after implant osteotomy preparation (BBT), marginal bone level (MBL), and facial soft tissue level (FST). All patients were followed 12 months after implant placement. RESULTS One hundred sixteen implants were placed in one hundred sixteen patients and enrolled for the study. Fifty-eight implants were randomly allocated in regular-IT and high-IT groups with a mean insertion torque ranging from 20 Ncm to 50 Ncm and from 50 Ncm to 100 Ncm, respectively. Three implants failed, and another five implants showed at the 12-month evaluation a marginal bone loss (ΔMBL) greater than 1.5 mm, being considered unsuccessful. CONCLUSIONS The findings suggested that implants inserted with high-IT (≥50 Ncm) in healed bone ridges showed more peri-implant bone remodeling and buccal soft tissue recession than implants inserted with a regular-IT (<50 Ncm). Moreover, sites with a thick buccal bone wall (≥1 mm) - after implant osteotomy site preparation - seemed to be less prone to buccal soft tissue recession after 12 months than sites with a thin buccal bone wall (<1 mm).


Journal of Cranio-maxillofacial Surgery | 2012

Healing of donor defect after mandibular parasymphyseal block harvesting: a 6-year computerized tomographic follow-up.

Carolina Sbordone; Paolo Toti; Franco Guidetti; Ranieri Martuscelli; Luigi Califano; Ludovico Sbordone

OBJECTIVES A long-term survey on the healing potential of large-sized parasymphyseal osseous defects. PATIENTS AND METHODS Ten patients, subjected to 14 bilateral and 3 unilateral parasymphyseal bone harvesting for alveolar ridge augmentation, were selected for the retrospective chart review. CT scans were performed immediately before bone grafting, before implant insertion, and then once annually for 6 years, and the volumes of the bone defects at the buccal aspect in the healing process were measured using a software program. Volumes from the yearly measurements were then compared statistically. RESULTS Volumes of both the intrasurgical defects, 0.77 (0.20) cc and of those in the one-year group, 0.60 (0.26) cc were statistically different from volumes of all the other time intervals (from 24 to 72 months) with all p-values less than 0.002 and 0.004, respectively. The healing of osseous defects in the long-term radiographic survey (6 years) resulted in bony infill of 63%. CONCLUSION For parasymphyseal defects of 0.7 cc, a maximum possible healing of two-thirds can be expected; a re-harvesting procedure could be performed 24 months after early surgery, due to both the formation of a new buccal cortical plate and the achievement of a steady state of osseous remodelling.


Journal of Periodontology | 2014

Tissue Stability of Implants Placed in Fresh Extraction Sockets: A 5-Year Prospective Single-Cohort Study

Ugo Covani; Luigi Canullo; Paolo Toti; Fortunato Alfonsi; Antonio Barone

BACKGROUND Several materials have been used for ridge preservation after tooth extraction. This 5-year prospective single-cohort study is aimed at evaluating the success rate, marginal bone level (MBL), soft tissue stability, and subjective patient evaluation of implants placed in fresh extraction sockets with the use of a flapless technique and a xenograft to treat the peri-implant bone defect. METHODS Patients requiring a single implant in fresh extraction sockets were selected. After flapless extraction and implant insertion, the peri-implant bone defect was grafted with porcine bone. Collagen membrane was used to stabilize the graft. Four months later, a second surgery and prosthetic procedures were performed. Clinical parameters (width of keratinized gingiva [WKG], facial soft tissue level [FST], papilla index, plaque index, and bleeding on probing) were measured, and periapical radiographs were taken at the time of implant placement (baseline) and then at 1, 3, and 5 years thereafter. Image analysis software was applied to measure changes in the marginal bone level (ΔMBL). Additionally, patient satisfaction regarding the implant treatment was evaluated. All analyses were collected and measured by an independent, trained observer. Together with descriptive statistics, for each of the outcome variables, pairwise comparisons were performed using the Wilcoxon signed-rank test for matched samples. The level of statistical significance was set at 0.01 for all analyses. RESULTS Forty-seven consecutive patients were treated, with an implant survival rate at 5 years of 95.7%. ΔMBL showed statistically significant differences: mean values were -0.68 ± 0.39, -0.94 ± 0.44, and -1.08 ± 0.43 mm at the 1, 3, and 5-year follow-up, respectively. Changes in WKG (ΔWKG) and FST (ΔFST) decreased from the 1-year point of the survey (0.80 ± 0.79 and 0.71 ± 0.73 mm for ΔWKG and ΔFST, respectively) to the last follow-up check at 5 years (0.67 ± 0.74 and 0.56 ± 0.69 mm for ΔWKG and ΔFST, respectively), with no significant differences. The papilla indexes showed significant differences among the baseline and all the other time points. Concerning patient satisfaction, at the last survey time point, 74% ± 11.8% of patients were satisfied regarding the overall implant treatment, 73.0% ± 11.1% gave a favorable opinion regarding the appearance of the peri-implant soft tissues, and 80.5% ± 11.3% judged positively the finished appearance of the implant crown. No significant differences were obtained among the three follow-up times. CONCLUSIONS The data of the present study suggest that the placement of a dental implant by means of a flapless technique in a fresh extraction socket filled with slowly resorbable graft biomaterial and with a delayed prosthetic restoration shows positive final esthetic outcomes. At the 5-year point of the survey, the changes in the bone level were minimal. Moreover, both midfacial tissue and the papillae maintained the early increase recorded before the first year of the follow-up.


International Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery | 2009

Clinical survey of neurosensory side-effects of mandibular parasymphyseal bone harvesting.

Ludovico Sbordone; GiovanBattista Menchini-Fabris; Paolo Toti; Carolina Sbordone; Luigi Califano; F. Guidetti

The aim of the present survey was to assess neurosensory disturbances and/or tooth-pulp sensitivity losses after mandibular parasymphyseal bone-harvesting procedures. Twenty-eight harvesting areas in 16 patients were surveyed. Mucosal and skin sensitivity of the chin/lower lip, divided into four regions, were determined via Pointed-Blunt and Two-Point-Discrimination Tests. Pulp sensitivity of the mandibular teeth from the left second bicuspid to the right second bicuspid was tested by cold vitality preoperatively and 12 months postoperatively. Teeth were grouped according to sensitivity alterations and distance from the harvesting defects, as measured on CT scans, and statistically significant differences sought. At 12 months, 29% of preoperatively vital cuspids overlying the harvesting defects revealed pulp-sensitivity losses; no patient reported anaesthesia or analgesia; hypoaesthesia was present in 4% (8 sites; 2 patients), hypoalgesia was present in 3% (5 sites; 2 patients) and Two-Point-Discrimination Tests yielded pathologic responses in 5% of tested areas (10 sites; 4 patients). Teeth with and without pulp sensitivity changes were statistically indistinguishable regarding distances between root apices or mental foramen and the harvesting defect. The loss of pulp sensitivity in any tooth cannot be predicted simply on the basis of the distance between its apex and the harvesting osteotomy line.


Journal of Periodontology | 2009

Gene clustering analysis in human osseous remodeling

Ludovico Sbordone; Carolina Sbordone; Natalia Filice; GiovanBattista Menchini-Fabris; Marco Baldoni; Paolo Toti

BACKGROUND Tentative bioinformatic predictions were performed to comprehend the complexity of the gene interaction networks of the T lymphocyte cell cycle and of human periodontitis. This study aims to identify and rank genes involved in osseous augmentation or bone remodeling to obtain groups with more numerous predicted associations called the leader gene clusters. METHODS An iterative search (consisting of a consecutive expansion-filtering loop) was performed for which only genes involved in a specific process were identified. For each gene, predicted associations with all other involved genes were obtained from a Web-available database (Search Tool for the Retrieval of Interacting Genes/Proteins) and the weighted number of links (WNL), given by the sum of only high-confidence predicted associations (results with a score > or =0.9), allowing gene ranking. Genes belonging to higher clustering classes were identified. RESULTS A total of 161 genes potentially involved in bone-volume augmentation and 128 genes connected with the bone-remodeling phenomenon were identified. For the bone-volume augmentation process, only one gene belonged to the leader gene group, whereas six other genes were classified as cluster B genes; for the bone-remodeling phenomenon, three leader genes were identified, whereas six other genes formed the cluster B group. No one gene belonged to leader gene clusters of both processes, whereas one gene of each higher cluster group belonged to the immediately lower cluster of the opposite process. Only three genes of the higher clusters were experimentally involved in both analyses. CONCLUSIONS A de novo identification was performed based on the data mining of leader genes involved in bone-volume augmentation or bone remodeling to acquire primeval information about their molecular basis and to plan future ad hoc targeted experiments. For several genes of the upper clusters, an active role in the bone processes was already known, but the present analysis suggested that they play a major role in the analyzed phenomena. The role of the transcription factors as leader genes and the numerous orphan genes (genes with WNL = 0) recovered probably attest to a lack of information regarding these processes, which could be further clarified through specific DNA microarray experiments.

Collaboration


Dive into the Paolo Toti's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ugo Covani

University of Chieti-Pescara

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Antonio Barone

University of Chieti-Pescara

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Carolina Sbordone

University of Naples Federico II

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Luigi Califano

University of Naples Federico II

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ranieri Martuscelli

University of Naples Federico II

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge