Description
Horizontal bone atrophy represents one of the most demanding challenges in
contemporary implantology. This book proposes a different way of approaching
it: minimally invasive interventions with maximum results. From the anatomical
foundations that allow horizontal defects to be understood, to their resolution
through different surgical procedures, the text reviews both those supported by
extensive clinical experience and long-term follow-up and the most recent,
marked by innovation and the opening of new therapeutic horizons.
The philosophy underpinning each chapter is clear and compelling: ‘the
minimum for the maximum’. Less surgical invasiveness, greater tissue
preservation. Less technical complexity, more safety and predictability.
With strong biomechanical support and decades of translational experience,
together with extensive visual material and documented clinical cases, the book
offers practical tools to turn limitations into safe and durable therapeutic
opportunities.
More than a compendium of protocols, this book is an invitation to
comprehensive implantology: grounded in biology, sustainable over time, and
always focused on the patient's wellbeing.




