Oral and Maxillo-Facial Rehabilitation: From Conventional and Digital Diagnostic to Surgeries and Prosthetics
A special issue of Journal of Functional Morphology and Kinesiology (ISSN 2411-5142).
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 July 2021) | Viewed by 4354
Special Issue Editor
Interests: oral biology; odontogenesis; periodontitis; oral biofilm; wound healing; biomaterials; biocompatibility; titanium surface; enamel; tissue regeneration
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Oral surgery and maxillofacial surgery are performed daily on patients of all ages. Aesthetics and function are closely related, and often this condition is perceived by the human eye as pleasant. Aesthetic analysis of the patient during the diagnostic phase is extremely important to perform in depth. Beauty is an advantage in society for the development of one’s own identity, for the growth of one’s self-esteem and therefore for the climb toward success. Aesthetics is the study of beauty and psychological responses as consequences. In the presence of dental anomalies or inherent maxillofacial bones, syndromic patients, or lack of dental elements, rehabilitation maneuvers are necessary. A patient with such a condition can be considered an amputee patient, and this should be rehabilitated with the use of a prosthesis. These start from a diagnostic phase, which could be conventional (analogic) or digital, and continue with the therapeutic planning and the rehabilitation phases, considering all the subsequent psychofunctional implications. In fact, surgery should always take into account a correct medical history collection and, precisely on this basis, plan one’s own surgery or prophylaxis, evaluating the risk and post-surgical quality of life of our patients. The purpose of this Special Issue is to promote knowledge about actual oral and maxillofacial rehabilitation techniques and their consequences on patients.
Dr. Luca Fiorillo
Guest Editor
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