Abstract:
Introduction: autogenous dental transplantation has shown promise in the
rehabilitation of teeth lost or unrecoverable by a germ or vital tooth.This technique
provides the translocation of dental elements in spaces in the arch seeking to restore
the stomatognathic system through the surgical repositioning of viable dental
elements from their place of origin to another alveolar site. The Unified Health
System (SUS) includes the method as a procedure of surgery and traumatology in
the perspective of reusing a tooth. Objective: to analyze through national and foreing
literature techniques and procedures for dental autotransplantation. Method:integrative literature review, using Boolean operators, in PubMed (Medline), Scielo
and Google Scholar databases referring to the last 10 years (2012-2022), with
studies that presented dental autotransplantation procedures as a central theme
being considered eligible, sample number from 10 patients older than eight years and
a follow-up period of more than one year. Literature review articles and animal
studies were excluded from the study. Results: after applying the eligibility criteria,
fifteen articles were considered for the present study. The total number of cases
evaluated was 1048 patients, aged between 8 and 58 years and with a follow-up
period of 1 to 29 years. The average success rate was 86.79%. Conclusion: dental
transplantation has high success rates, proving to be an excellent, low-cost
therapeutic option that should be encouraged in the Unified Health System (SUS).