Sinus lift and bone augmentation procedures are used when the upper posterior jaw does not provide enough vertical or horizontal bone for stable implant placement. The goal is to create a site that supports long-term implant function, soft-tissue stability, and restorative predictability.
When a Sinus Lift May Be Needed
- Bone height is limited below the maxillary sinus
- The site has lost volume after extraction
- Implant placement would otherwise be too short, poorly positioned, or unstable
- A staged approach is safer than forcing implant placement into inadequate bone
How the Site Is Evaluated
Planning is based on radiographic assessment, tissue anatomy, restorative goals, and the timing of implant placement. Some cases are suitable for simultaneous augmentation and implant placement, while others are safer with staged healing before implants are inserted.
Bone Augmentation Beyond the Sinus
Site development may also involve ridge preservation, contour augmentation, or horizontal and vertical support procedures when the ridge shape itself is compromised. The exact approach depends on where the defect is and what the final restorative design requires.
What Matters for Long-Term Success
- Stable implant positioning in prosthetically correct three-dimensional space
- Adequate bone volume and tissue quality
- Realistic timing between grafting, implant placement, and final restoration
- Maintenance access once treatment is complete
