The osseointegration technique for the rehabilitation of the exenterated orbit
J. A. Nerad, K. D. Carter, W. E. LaVelle, A. Fyler and P. I. Branemark
Department of Ophthalmology, University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics, Iowa City 52242.
Osseointegrated implants can be used successfully to support maxillofacial
prostheses. Six patients (aged 37 to 80 years; average age, 68 years)
underwent orbital exenteration for eyelid neoplasms infiltrating into the
orbit. Each patient underwent a two-stage osseointegration procedure in
preparation for fitting an orbital prosthesis. In the first stage, three or
four bone-anchored fixtures were placed into the bony orbital rim. Skin
penetration and abutment placement were performed in the second-stage
operation, performed 3 to 6 months later. Successful osseointegration was
achieved in 17 (94.4%) of 18 fixtures in five nonirradiated patients. All
five patients were successfully fitted with an implant-retained prosthesis.
One patient who underwent irradiation lost all four fixtures that had been
placed. This patient chose to wear a black patch rather than a conventional
prosthesis held in with adhesive. Average follow-up was 16 months for the
five patients who were successfully fitted with orbital prostheses (range,
6 to 30 months).