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Schedule of Events Tuesday, Oct. 30, 2018


FCE14: Digital Workflows from Surgical Planning to Final Restoration 10:45 a.m. - 12:15 p.m. Implant Surgery and Prosthetic Rehabilitation


Moderator: Serge Dibart Speakers: Harold S. Baumgarten and Howard Fraiman


Patients’ esthetic demands have never been higher than they are today. Maximizing the restorative outcome requires precision implant planning, placement, as well as meticulous development of the gingival environment. Digital workflows can increase precision, decrease morbidity, and improve esthetic outcomes. This lecture will discuss the complete digital workflow from surgical planning to the final restoration.


Educational Objectives:


• Discuss the digital implant surgical planning process and digital surgical guide fabrication.


• Learn how to establish an ideal gingival environment. • Review the digital restorative process.


FCE15: Full-Arch Immediate Placement and Loading: A Non-Grafting Alternative for the Periodontist


10:45 a.m. - 12:15 p.m. Implant Surgery and Prosthetic Rehabilitation


Moderator: George V. Duello Speakers: Jeffrey Ganeles and Sonia Leziy


Immediate dental rehabilitation with fixed restorations can be a life-changing event for patients. Delivering this service to someone in need is one of the most gratifying and rewarding services a periodontist can provide, frequently reversing decades of anxiety, disease, and unsuccessful treatment. It is also one of the most complex procedures done in dentistry as it forces sophisticated surgical, prosthetic, and laboratory procedures, often performed by different individuals, to be done in a compressed time period. Successful outcomes demand proficiency in many technical aspects of surgery that form part of the periodontist’s skillset.


Educational Objectives:


• Explain how the digital workflow can simplify the planning, enhance the surgery, and advance the transitional restoration.


• Grasp the use of angled implants and/or short implants to avoid pneumatized sinuses and other vital anatomical structures.


• Identify how bone density-based preparations and densification protocols can increase the probability of immediate restoration.


• Consider different restorative options to simplify and improve provisionalization.


FCE16: Predictable Ridge Augmentation with Rigid Membranes


10:45 a.m. - 12:15 p.m. Tissue Engineering and Hard Tissue Reconstruction


Moderator: David Rolf, II


Speakers: Hsun-Liang (Albert) Chan and James G. Woodyard


Clinically applying the principles of guided-bone regeneration for predictable ridge augmentation can present challenges such as increased complications when using rigid membranes. This session will discuss the reality and precautions of using rigid membranes, based on the literature and clinical case experiences, and will comprehensively review variables that dictate clinical outcomes. What if you could create your own scaffold to design how you wanted the bone to grow? Using a combination of a poly-DL-lactic acid (PDLLA) scaffold, allogenic bone graft, platelet rich fibrin, and acellular dermal matrix, this course will demonstrate how to achieve very predictable ridge augmentation results in a short amount of surgical chair time. Participants will beneft from discussion about the key factors that influence the success of ridge augmentation such as treatment planning and indications for this procedure, hard/soft tissue defect characteristics, biomaterial properties and selection, flap design and closure, strategies to minimize and manage complications, as well as provisional design and post- operative care.


Educational Objectives:


• Learn the indications for using rigid membranes for horizontal and vertical ridge augmentation and how to treatment plan these cases.


• Gain an understanding of existing and new rigid membranes and the importance of material selection and use of biologic growth factors for ridge augmentation.


• Clinically evaluate soft tissues to optimize flap closure following ridge augmentation, and recognize the causes and management of complications using rigid membranes.


56 | American Academy of Periodontology | 104th


Annual Meeting


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