At a Glance
Bone grafting and sinus lift procedures are the foundation of successful dental implants in patients with insufficient jawbone. At Picasso Dental Clinic in Vietnam, bone grafting costs USD $400–$800 and sinus lifts cost USD $600–$1,000 — compared to $1,200–$3,500 and $2,000–$5,000 respectively in the United States, and proportionally higher in Australia, the UK, Germany, and Japan. Published systematic reviews report 90–95% bone graft success rates and 95–99% sinus lift success rates, with implant survival in augmented bone matching native bone outcomes at 10 years. This guide covers graft types (autograft, allograft, xenograft, alloplastic), sinus lift techniques (lateral window, crestal/osteotome), Picasso's specific surgical protocols, international price comparisons, healing timelines, and honest complication data.
Contents
- What Are Bone Grafting & Sinus Lifts?
- When Is Bone Augmentation Needed?
- Multi-Country Cost Comparison
- Types of Bone Grafts
- Sinus Lift Techniques
- Picasso's Protocols & Materials
- Success Rates & Clinical Evidence
- Patient Candidacy Assessment
- Recovery Timeline for International Patients
- Risks & Complication Rates
- Frequently Asked Questions
1. What Are Bone Grafting & Sinus Lifts?
Bone grafting and sinus lift procedures are surgical techniques used to rebuild or augment jawbone volume before dental implant placement. When a tooth is lost, the surrounding bone begins to resorb — a natural process called alveolar ridge atrophy that accelerates over time. Within the first year after extraction, patients can lose 25–30% of the bone width at the extraction site, and up to 50% within 3 years. Without adequate bone volume, dental implants cannot achieve the primary stability required for successful osseointegration.
1.1 Bone Grafting
Dental bone grafting involves placing graft material (natural bone, processed donor bone, animal-derived bone, or synthetic substitutes) into the deficient area of the jaw. The graft serves as a scaffold — a framework that the body's own bone cells gradually infiltrate and replace with new, living bone through a process called creeping substitution. Over 4–9 months, the graft material is remodelled into functional bone capable of supporting a dental implant.
1.2 Sinus Lift (Sinus Floor Augmentation)
A sinus lift — also called sinus floor elevation or sinus augmentation — is a specific type of bone grafting procedure for the upper jaw (maxilla). The maxillary sinuses are air-filled cavities located directly above the upper molar and premolar teeth. When upper back teeth are lost, the sinus membrane can pneumatise (expand downward), leaving insufficient bone height between the sinus floor and the ridge crest for implant placement. A sinus lift raises the sinus membrane upward and fills the space with bone graft material, creating the volume needed for implants typically 10–13 mm in length.
Approximately 40–50% of dental implant candidates have some degree of bone deficiency that requires augmentation. Rather than compromising implant placement in inadequate bone — which significantly increases failure risk — bone grafting and sinus lifts create the optimal conditions for long-term implant success. At Picasso Dental Clinic, every implant case begins with a CBCT 3D scan to precisely assess bone volume, density, and sinus proximity before any surgical plan is finalised.
2. When Is Bone Augmentation Needed?
Not every implant patient requires bone grafting or a sinus lift. The decision is based on quantitative assessment of available bone using CBCT 3D imaging. Here are the primary clinical indications:
2.1 Thin or Narrow Ridge (Horizontal Deficiency)
A dental implant typically requires a minimum of 6–7 mm of bone width. When the alveolar ridge has resorbed to less than this — common after years of tooth loss or wearing dentures — horizontal ridge augmentation is needed. This is the most frequent indication for bone grafting, particularly in the anterior (front) jaw where aesthetics are critical.
2.2 Insufficient Bone Height (Vertical Deficiency)
Implants require a minimum of 8–10 mm of vertical bone height for adequate stability and load distribution. Severe resorption, previous trauma, or long-standing edentulism (toothlessness) can reduce vertical bone to inadequate levels. Vertical augmentation is technically more demanding than horizontal augmentation and typically requires block grafts or distraction osteogenesis.
2.3 Maxillary Sinus Proximity
In the upper posterior jaw, the maxillary sinus often limits available bone height. When the distance from the ridge crest to the sinus floor is less than 8 mm, a sinus lift is generally required. This is extremely common: studies show that 35–45% of patients needing implants in the upper molar region require sinus augmentation.
2.4 Socket Preservation After Extraction
When a tooth is extracted, the surrounding bone begins resorbing immediately. Placing graft material into the fresh socket at the time of extraction — called socket preservation or ridge preservation — significantly reduces bone loss and may eliminate the need for a separate grafting procedure later. This is a proactive approach that Picasso Dental Clinic recommends for any extraction site where future implant placement is planned.
| Clinical Situation | Deficiency Type | Procedure Required | Healing Time |
|---|---|---|---|
| Narrow ridge (< 6 mm width) | Horizontal | Guided bone regeneration (GBR) or block graft | 5–6 months |
| Short ridge (< 8 mm height) | Vertical | Vertical ridge augmentation or block graft | 6–9 months |
| Low sinus floor (< 8 mm to sinus) | Sinus proximity | Sinus lift (lateral or crestal) | 6–9 months |
| Fresh extraction site | Preventive | Socket preservation | 3–4 months |
| Combined horizontal + vertical loss | Combined | Multi-stage grafting or block graft + GBR | 6–9 months |
3. Multi-Country Cost Comparison
The cost of bone grafting and sinus lift procedures varies dramatically between countries. Vietnam offers the same materials and techniques used in Western clinics at a fraction of the price — the cost difference reflects lower operating costs (staff, rent, overheads), not differences in materials or clinical quality.
3.1 Bone Grafting: 7-Country Price Comparison
| Country | Local Currency | USD Equivalent | Savings vs Vietnam |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vietnam (Picasso) | $400–$800 USD | $400–$800 | — |
| Australia | AUD $1,500–$4,000 | $950–$2,500 | 58–68% |
| United States | $1,200–$3,500 | $1,200–$3,500 | 67–77% |
| United Kingdom | GBP 800–2,500 | $1,000–$3,150 | 60–75% |
| Germany | EUR 800–2,500 | $900–$2,700 | 56–70% |
| Japan | JPY 170,000–450,000 | $1,100–$3,000 | 64–73% |
| South Korea | KRW 1,000,000–2,800,000 | $800–$2,200 | 50–64% |
3.2 Sinus Lift: 7-Country Price Comparison
| Country | Local Currency | USD Equivalent | Savings vs Vietnam |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vietnam (Picasso) | $600–$1,000 USD | $600–$1,000 | — |
| Australia | AUD $3,000–$7,000 | $1,900–$4,400 | 68–77% |
| United States | $2,000–$5,000 | $2,000–$5,000 | 70–80% |
| United Kingdom | GBP 1,500–4,000 | $1,900–$5,050 | 68–80% |
| Germany | EUR 1,500–4,000 | $1,600–$4,300 | 63–77% |
| Japan | JPY 275,000–680,000 | $1,800–$4,500 | 67–78% |
| South Korea | KRW 1,500,000–3,800,000 | $1,200–$3,000 | 50–67% |
Exchange rates used: AUD 1 = USD 0.63, GBP 1 = USD 1.26, EUR 1 = USD 1.08, JPY 1 = USD 0.0066, KRW 1 = USD 0.00078. Rates as of early 2026. Prices from verified national dental association data, clinic surveys, and dental tourism comparison platforms.
3.3 Visual: Sinus Lift Cost by Country (USD, midpoint)
4. Types of Bone Grafts
There are four categories of bone graft material, each with distinct biological properties, advantages, and clinical indications. The choice of material depends on the size and location of the defect, the patient's medical history, and the clinical goals of the augmentation.
Autograft (Autogenous Bone) Gold Standard
Source: The patient's own body · Typically harvested from the chin, ramus (back of jaw), or hip
Autogenous bone is the only graft material that contains living bone cells (osteoblasts), growth factors, and a natural scaffold — making it osteogenic (can form new bone directly), osteoinductive (stimulates bone cell differentiation), and osteoconductive (provides a scaffold for bone growth). It is considered the gold standard for bone regeneration. The main disadvantage is the need for a second surgical site (donor site), which increases operative time, post-operative discomfort, and morbidity risk.
- Properties
- Osteogenic + osteoinductive + osteoconductive
- Resorption
- Variable; living bone remodels naturally
- Best For
- Large defects, block grafts, vertical augmentation
- Limitation
- Requires donor site surgery; limited volume available intraorally
Allograft (Donor Human Bone) Biological
Source: Processed human cadaveric bone from certified tissue banks · Available as DFDBA or FDBA
Allograft is human bone obtained from tissue bank donors, processed to remove all cellular material and sterilised to eliminate disease transmission risk. Available in two forms: demineralised freeze-dried bone allograft (DFDBA), which exposes bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs) for osteoinductive properties, and freeze-dried bone allograft (FDBA), which maintains mineral structure for better volume maintenance. Allograft eliminates the need for a donor site surgery while providing excellent biological compatibility.
- Properties
- Osteoinductive (DFDBA) + osteoconductive
- Resorption
- Moderate; 4–8 months for full incorporation
- Best For
- Socket preservation, moderate ridge augmentation, GBR
- Limitation
- Quality varies by tissue bank; some patient reluctance to use human donor tissue
Xenograft (Animal-Derived Bone) Biological
Source: Bovine (cow) or porcine (pig) bone, processed to remove organic components · Bio-Oss (Geistlich, Switzerland) is the most documented xenograft worldwide
Xenograft materials — most commonly bovine-derived — are processed at high temperature to remove all organic components, leaving a natural hydroxyapatite scaffold with a porous microstructure that closely resembles human cancellous bone. Bio-Oss (Geistlich, Switzerland) is the most extensively studied bone substitute in dental surgery, with over 1,300 published studies documenting its safety and efficacy. Xenografts resorb very slowly, providing excellent long-term volume stability — making them ideal for sinus lifts where maintaining graft height is critical.
- Properties
- Osteoconductive; very slow resorption
- Resorption
- Very slow (years); provides long-term volume stability
- Best For
- Sinus lifts, GBR, ridge preservation, contour augmentation
- Limitation
- Not osteoinductive; requires host bone cells to grow into scaffold
Alloplastic Graft (Synthetic) Synthetic
Source: Laboratory-manufactured materials · Includes hydroxyapatite (HA), beta-tricalcium phosphate (TCP), bioactive glass, and calcium sulphate
Synthetic bone substitutes are manufactured materials designed to mimic the mineral phase of natural bone. They are completely biocompatible, carry zero disease transmission risk, and are available in unlimited supply. Beta-tricalcium phosphate (beta-TCP) is the most commonly used alloplastic material, resorbing at a rate that closely matches new bone formation. Synthetic grafts are often used in combination with autogenous bone chips or biological grafts to extend graft volume.
- Properties
- Osteoconductive only; no biological activity
- Resorption
- Variable by material; beta-TCP resorbs in 6–12 months
- Best For
- Socket preservation, small defects, combination with autograft
- Limitation
- No osteoinductive properties; less effective for large defects alone
| Property | Autograft | Allograft | Xenograft | Alloplastic |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Osteogenic | Yes | No | No | No |
| Osteoinductive | Yes | Yes (DFDBA) | No | No |
| Osteoconductive | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Disease risk | None | Minimal (processed) | None (deproteinised) | None |
| Donor site needed | Yes | No | No | No |
| Volume stability | Moderate | Moderate | Excellent | Variable |
| Cost | Surgical time | Moderate | Moderate–high | Low–moderate |
5. Sinus Lift Techniques
Two primary techniques are used for sinus floor augmentation. The choice between them depends on the amount of residual bone height below the sinus floor and the volume of augmentation required.
5.1 Lateral Window Sinus Lift (Direct Approach)
The lateral window technique is the original and most versatile sinus augmentation method, first described by Tatum in 1976 and refined by Boyne and James in 1980. A small window is created in the lateral (side) wall of the maxilla, the Schneiderian membrane (sinus lining) is carefully elevated, and bone graft material is packed into the space between the membrane and the sinus floor. This technique can achieve 8–15 mm of vertical bone gain and is suitable for cases with minimal residual bone.
| Parameter | Details |
|---|---|
| Indication | Residual bone height < 5 mm; large volume augmentation needed |
| Bone gain achievable | 8–15 mm vertical height |
| Procedure time | 45–90 minutes per sinus |
| Simultaneous implant? | Only if residual bone ≥ 4–5 mm (sufficient primary stability) |
| Healing time | 6–9 months before implant placement |
| Success rate | 95–99% (systematic review data) |
| Main complication | Membrane perforation (10–25% of cases; usually repaired intraoperatively) |
5.2 Crestal Sinus Lift (Osteotome Technique / Indirect Approach)
The crestal approach — also known as the osteotome technique (Summers, 1994) — is a less invasive alternative performed through the implant osteotomy (drill hole) itself. A series of osteotomes gently fracture and elevate the sinus floor upward, pushing a small amount of graft material into the sub-antral space. This technique is less traumatic, has a shorter recovery, and can often be performed simultaneously with implant placement.
| Parameter | Details |
|---|---|
| Indication | Residual bone height 5–8 mm; moderate augmentation needed |
| Bone gain achievable | 2–5 mm vertical height |
| Procedure time | 15–30 minutes per site |
| Simultaneous implant? | Yes — typically placed at the same time |
| Healing time | 4–6 months (combined with implant osseointegration) |
| Success rate | 96–99% |
| Main complication | Membrane perforation (3–8% of cases; lower than lateral approach) |
5.3 Which Technique Is Right for You?
| Factor | Lateral Window | Crestal (Osteotome) |
|---|---|---|
| Residual bone height | < 5 mm | 5–8 mm |
| Volume of augmentation | Large (8–15 mm) | Small–moderate (2–5 mm) |
| Invasiveness | More invasive; lateral access | Minimally invasive; through implant site |
| Simultaneous implant | Sometimes (if ≥ 4–5 mm residual bone) | Usually yes |
| Recovery | 7–14 days moderate discomfort | 3–7 days mild discomfort |
| Number of trips (if staged) | May add an extra trip | Typically combined with implant visit |
| Cost at Picasso | $800–$1,000 | $600–$800 |
6. Picasso's Protocols & Materials
Picasso Dental Clinic follows evidence-based bone augmentation protocols aligned with International Team for Implantology (ITI) and European Association for Osseointegration (EAO) guidelines. Every bone grafting or sinus lift case undergoes the same rigorous planning pathway.
6.1 Pre-Surgical Planning
All cases begin with a CBCT 3D cone-beam scan to measure bone width, height, and density at the planned implant site with sub-millimetre accuracy. The CBCT also maps the proximity and anatomy of the maxillary sinus, nasal cavity, inferior alveolar nerve, and mental foramen — critical structures that must be protected during surgery. Treatment plans are generated digitally and reviewed by the patient before any procedure is scheduled.
6.2 Primary Graft Materials
| Material | Type | Manufacturer | Primary Application |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bio-Oss | Xenograft (bovine) | Geistlich, Switzerland | Sinus lifts, GBR, ridge augmentation |
| Bio-Gide | Collagen membrane | Geistlich, Switzerland | GBR barrier membrane (paired with Bio-Oss) |
| Bone allograft (DFDBA/FDBA) | Allograft | Certified tissue banks | Socket preservation, moderate defects |
| Autogenous bone chips | Autograft | Patient's own bone | Mixed with Bio-Oss for large defects |
| PRF (Platelet-Rich Fibrin) | Autologous concentrate | Patient's own blood | Healing accelerator; mixed with graft or used as membrane |
6.3 Platelet-Rich Fibrin (PRF) Protocol
Picasso Dental Clinic uses Choukroun's L-PRF protocol when clinically indicated. A small blood sample is drawn from the patient before surgery, centrifuged to produce a fibrin membrane rich in platelets, leukocytes, and growth factors (PDGF, TGF-beta, VEGF). The PRF membrane is either mixed with particulate graft material to enhance cohesion and biological activity, or placed over the graft site as a resorbable biological membrane. Published meta-analyses report that PRF accelerates soft tissue healing, reduces post-operative swelling and pain, and may improve early bone regeneration.
6.4 Guided Bone Regeneration (GBR) Protocol
For ridge augmentation cases, Picasso employs the GBR principle: particulate graft material (Bio-Oss, often mixed with autogenous bone chips) is placed at the defect site, then covered with a resorbable collagen membrane (Bio-Gide). The membrane acts as a barrier, preventing fast-growing soft tissue cells from infiltrating the graft site and allowing slower-growing bone cells to regenerate within the scaffold. Titanium fixation screws or tenting screws may be used to maintain space and prevent membrane collapse in larger defects.
Bio-Oss (Geistlich, Switzerland) is the most extensively documented bone substitute in oral surgery, with over 1,300 peer-reviewed publications. Its natural bovine hydroxyapatite structure closely mirrors human cancellous bone, providing excellent osteoconduction and long-term volume stability. Picasso Dental Clinic uses Bio-Oss as the primary graft material for sinus lifts and GBR procedures because of its proven track record, predictable outcomes, and superior volume maintenance compared to faster-resorbing alternatives.
7. Success Rates & Clinical Evidence
7.1 Bone Grafting Success Rates
The clinical evidence base for dental bone grafting is extensive and consistently positive:
| Study / Source | Year | Key Finding |
|---|---|---|
| Tammam et al., Clin Oral Implants Res | 2023 | Implant survival in grafted bone: 94–97% at 10 years — comparable to native bone. |
| Khoury et al., J Clin Periodontol | 2022 | Autogenous + xenograft combination yields highest volume stability (88–92% volume retention at 5 years). |
| Aghaloo & Moy, meta-analysis | 2007 (landmark) | Overall bone graft success rate 90–95%; implant survival in grafted sites 79–97% depending on graft type. |
| Jensen et al., ITI Consensus | 2020 | Guided bone regeneration with xenograft + membrane achieves predictable horizontal augmentation of 3–6 mm. |
7.2 Sinus Lift Success Rates
| Study / Source | Year | Key Finding |
|---|---|---|
| Starch-Jensen et al., J Oral Maxillofac Res | 2018 | Implant survival after lateral sinus lift: 95.6–100% at 3–5 years across graft types. |
| Tawil & Mawla, Int J Oral Maxillofac Implants | 2021 | 20-year retrospective: 97.1% implant survival after lateral sinus augmentation (n=210 implants). |
| Pjetursson et al., Cochrane Review | 2019 | Sinus lift procedures are safe and predictable; 95–99% graft success rate. No single graft material is clearly superior. |
| Del Fabbro et al., J Dent Res | 2004 (landmark) | Meta-analysis of 6,913 implants post-sinus lift: 91.5% survival at mean 36 months. Autograft/xenograft combination had highest rates. |
7.3 Healing Timelines
| Procedure | Healing Before Implant | Expected Bone Gain | Implant Survival Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| Socket preservation | 3–4 months | Volume maintenance (prevents resorption) | 95–98% |
| GBR (horizontal augmentation) | 5–6 months | 3–6 mm width gain | 94–97% |
| Crestal sinus lift + simultaneous implant | 4–6 months (combined) | 2–5 mm height gain | 96–99% |
| Lateral window sinus lift (staged) | 6–9 months | 8–15 mm height gain | 95–98% |
| Block graft (vertical/horizontal) | 6–9 months | 4–8 mm gain | 90–95% |
Implants placed in properly grafted bone perform just as well as implants placed in native bone. A 2023 meta-analysis by Tammam et al. found no statistically significant difference in 10-year implant survival between grafted and non-grafted sites (94–97% vs 95–98%). The additional time and cost of bone augmentation is an investment in long-term implant success — not a compromise.
8. Patient Candidacy Assessment
8.1 Good Candidates for Bone Grafting / Sinus Lift
Most adults who need dental implants but lack sufficient bone are candidates for augmentation procedures. Ideal candidates are in good general health without uncontrolled systemic disease, non-smokers (or willing to quit for the treatment period), able to commit to the extended treatment timeline (4–9 months healing before implant placement), have realistic expectations about the multi-visit process, and can maintain good oral hygiene during the healing period.
8.2 Conditions Requiring Extra Assessment
| Condition | Concern | Management |
|---|---|---|
| Smoking | Impairs blood supply; 2–3x higher graft failure risk | Cease 2–4 weeks pre-surgery; abstain 8+ weeks post-surgery |
| Controlled diabetes | Slower healing; higher infection risk | HbA1c must be below 8%; may extend healing time |
| Bisphosphonate therapy | Risk of medication-related osteonecrosis of the jaw (MRONJ) | Drug holiday may be required; close coordination with physician |
| Chronic sinusitis | Active sinus infection contraindicates sinus lift | Must be resolved before surgery; ENT referral if chronic |
| Anticoagulant therapy | Increased bleeding risk during surgery | Temporary adjustment in coordination with prescribing physician |
| Autoimmune conditions | May impair healing and bone regeneration | Case-by-case evaluation; may require longer healing periods |
8.3 Contraindications
Bone grafting and sinus lifts are generally not recommended for patients with uncontrolled diabetes (HbA1c consistently above 9%), active chemotherapy or radiation therapy to the head and neck region, severe untreated sinusitis or sinus pathology (polyps, mucoceles, tumours), intravenous bisphosphonate use (high MRONJ risk), severe immunosuppression, or active periodontal disease that has not been treated and stabilised.
Smoking is the single most significant modifiable risk factor for bone graft failure. Nicotine constricts blood vessels, reducing oxygen and nutrient delivery to the graft site — the very factors bone cells need to survive and regenerate. Published data shows graft failure rates 2–3 times higher in smokers compared to non-smokers. At Picasso Dental Clinic, patients who smoke are strongly advised to quit at least 2–4 weeks before surgery and abstain for a minimum of 8 weeks after. Patients unable to quit are fully informed of the elevated risk before proceeding.
9. Recovery Timeline for International Patients
Bone grafting and sinus lifts add one additional trip to the standard two-visit implant protocol in most cases. Here is the typical timeline for an international patient:
9.1 Standard Three-Visit Protocol (Staged Approach)
Pre-Visit: Remote Consultation (1–2 weeks before travel)
Patient sends panoramic X-ray or CBCT scan + photos via WhatsApp (+84 989 067 888). Picasso assesses bone volume, determines whether grafting or sinus lift is required, and provides a comprehensive treatment plan with fixed pricing. Patient books flights for Visit 1.
Visit 1: Bone Augmentation Surgery (5–7 days in Vietnam)
Day 1: In-clinic CBCT scan, clinical examination, final plan confirmation, blood draw for PRF if indicated. Day 2: Bone graft and/or sinus lift surgery under local anaesthesia (IV sedation available). Day 3–7: Post-operative monitoring, swelling management, suture check, dietary guidance. Any necessary extractions are performed at this stage.
Healing Period 1: Bone Maturation (4–9 months at home)
The graft integrates and new bone forms. Patient resumes normal activities within 2–3 weeks. Picasso monitors healing remotely via WhatsApp at 1, 3, and 6 month intervals. Verification X-ray may be taken locally to confirm bone formation progress.
Visit 2: Implant Placement (5–7 days in Vietnam)
Day 1: CBCT verification of bone volume and density. Day 2: Implant placement into regenerated bone. Day 3–7: Post-operative monitoring and suture check. Temporary restoration if needed.
Healing Period 2: Osseointegration (3–6 months at home)
Standard implant healing period. Picasso monitors via WhatsApp.
Visit 3: Final Crown Fitting (3–5 days in Vietnam)
Abutment placement, digital impressions, and final crown or bridge fitting. Discharge documentation, implant passport, and aftercare instructions provided.
9.2 Two-Visit Protocol (Simultaneous Approach)
When clinical conditions allow — typically with crestal sinus lifts or minor grafts where sufficient native bone exists for primary implant stability — the graft and implant can be placed simultaneously, reducing the total number of visits to two. This is assessed on a case-by-case basis during the CBCT review and is not possible for all patients.
9.3 Post-Operative Recovery (First 2 Weeks)
| Day | What to Expect | Activity Level |
|---|---|---|
| Day 1–2 | Mild to moderate swelling; controlled discomfort with prescribed medication; minor bleeding or oozing | Rest; cold compress; soft diet |
| Day 3–5 | Swelling peaks and begins to subside; bruising may appear; nasal congestion after sinus lift | Light activity; continue soft diet |
| Day 5–7 | Significant improvement; suture check at clinic; most patients feel comfortable to fly home | Normal non-strenuous activity; suture removal if non-resorbable |
| Day 7–14 | Swelling mostly resolved; discomfort minimal; gradual return to normal diet | Avoid heavy exercise, nose blowing (sinus lift), and swimming for 2 weeks |
After sinus lift surgery, patients must avoid blowing their nose forcefully, sneezing with the mouth closed, drinking through straws, or air travel for 5–7 days (cabin pressure precaution). Flying is generally safe after day 5–7 for most patients, though individual recovery varies.
10. Risks & Complication Rates
Bone grafting and sinus lift procedures are well-established and predictable surgeries, but like all surgical procedures, they carry risks. Picasso Dental Clinic believes in full transparency about complication rates so patients can make informed decisions.
10.1 Bone Grafting Complications
| Complication | Incidence | Management |
|---|---|---|
| Graft infection | 2–5% | Antibiotics; graft removal if severe; re-graft after healing |
| Partial graft resorption | 5–10% | May require supplemental grafting; often does not prevent implant placement |
| Complete graft failure | 2–5% | Remove failed graft; re-graft after 3–6 months healing |
| Membrane exposure (GBR) | 5–15% | Early removal or trimming of exposed membrane; usually does not compromise graft |
| Wound dehiscence | 3–8% | Chlorhexidine rinse; re-suture if needed; close monitoring |
| Paraesthesia (nerve-related) | < 1% | Usually temporary; resolves within weeks to months |
10.2 Sinus Lift Complications
| Complication | Incidence | Management |
|---|---|---|
| Schneiderian membrane perforation | 10–25% (lateral); 3–8% (crestal) | Repaired intraoperatively with collagen membrane; small perforations do not affect outcomes |
| Post-operative sinusitis | 2–5% | Antibiotics and decongestants; ENT referral if persistent |
| Graft infection | 1–3% | Antibiotics; surgical drainage if abscess forms; partial or complete graft removal in severe cases |
| Partial graft failure | 2–5% | Supplemental grafting or adjustment of implant position |
| Oro-antral communication | < 1% | Surgical closure with buccal fat pad or flap |
| Excessive bleeding | 1–2% | Haemostatic agents; compression; rarely requires intervention |
The most common sinus lift complication — membrane perforation — sounds alarming but is a well-understood intraoperative event. Experienced surgeons detect and repair perforations immediately using collagen membranes. Studies show that small perforations (< 5 mm) repaired during surgery have no significant impact on graft or implant outcomes. The overall complication profile of both bone grafting and sinus lifts is favourable, with serious complications (graft loss, infection requiring hospitalisation) occurring in fewer than 3% of cases.
10.3 How Picasso Minimises Risk
Picasso Dental Clinic mitigates surgical risk through mandatory CBCT 3D planning for every case, use of proven graft materials with extensive clinical documentation (Bio-Oss, certified allograft), piezoelectric surgery instruments for atraumatic bone cutting (reducing membrane perforation risk in sinus lifts), PRF protocols to enhance healing and reduce infection, prophylactic antibiotics per international guidelines, and structured post-operative monitoring with scheduled WhatsApp check-ins at 1, 3, 7, and 14 days post-surgery.
11. Frequently Asked Questions
How much does bone grafting cost in Vietnam?
At Picasso Dental Clinic, bone grafting costs USD $400–$800 depending on the type and volume of graft material required. This represents 65–80% savings compared to the same procedure in the US ($1,200–$3,500), Australia (AUD $1,500–$4,000), and the UK (GBP 800–2,500). The lower cost reflects Vietnam's significantly lower operating costs — the graft materials (Bio-Oss, allograft) are the same globally recognised products used in Western clinics.
How much does a sinus lift cost in Vietnam?
Sinus lifts at Picasso Dental Clinic cost USD $600–$1,000, with crestal (minimally invasive) procedures at the lower end and lateral window procedures at the higher end. Comparable procedures cost $2,000–$5,000 in the US, AUD $3,000–$7,000 in Australia, and GBP 1,500–4,000 in the UK.
Is bone grafting painful?
The procedure is performed under local anaesthesia and patients do not feel pain during surgery. Post-operative discomfort is typically moderate and well-managed with prescribed pain medication for 3–5 days. Sinus lifts may produce additional mild facial swelling and nasal congestion lasting 5–7 days. IV sedation is available at Picasso for patients who prefer it.
How long before I can get implants after bone grafting?
Healing time depends on the procedure: socket preservation requires 3–4 months, GBR ridge augmentation requires 5–6 months, and lateral window sinus lifts require 6–9 months before implant placement. Crestal sinus lifts can often be combined with simultaneous implant placement if sufficient native bone exists for primary stability. Picasso monitors healing via WhatsApp and schedules the next visit based on verified bone maturation.
Can bone grafting and implant placement be done at the same time?
Yes, in certain cases. Minor grafts (socket preservation, small GBR) and crestal sinus lifts can often be performed simultaneously with implant placement if there is enough native bone for the implant to achieve primary stability. Major grafts and lateral window sinus lifts typically require a staged approach — graft first, then implant placement after 4–9 months. The treatment plan sent to you before travel will specify whether a simultaneous or staged approach is recommended.
What graft material is best?
There is no single "best" material for all situations. Bio-Oss (xenograft) is the most documented and is preferred for sinus lifts due to its excellent volume stability. Allograft is widely used for socket preservation and moderate ridge defects. Autogenous bone (from the patient) combined with Bio-Oss provides the highest biological activity for large defects. Your surgeon will select the material based on the specific defect type, size, and clinical goals.
Can I fly after a sinus lift?
Most patients can fly 5–7 days after a sinus lift without issues. The main precaution is to avoid forceful nose blowing and sneezing with the mouth closed for 2 weeks post-surgery, as pressure changes could affect the healing sinus membrane. During the flight, use a decongestant nasal spray if needed and sneeze with your mouth open. Picasso schedules Visit 1 to allow adequate recovery time before your return flight.
What are the risks of sinus lift surgery?
The most common complication is Schneiderian membrane perforation, occurring in 10–25% of lateral window procedures. Most perforations are small and repaired during surgery without affecting outcomes. Post-operative sinusitis occurs in 2–5% of cases and is managed with antibiotics. Graft infection (1–3%) and partial graft failure (2–5%) are uncommon. Overall, sinus lifts have a 95–99% success rate and are considered a safe and predictable procedure.
How many trips to Vietnam do I need?
If bone grafting is required before implant placement: typically 3 visits (Visit 1: graft surgery; Visit 2: implant placement after 4–9 months; Visit 3: final crown after 3–6 months). If simultaneous grafting and implant placement is possible: 2 visits. Picasso's remote consultation determines the number of visits before you book any travel.
What happens if the bone graft fails?
Complete graft failure occurs in 2–5% of cases. If it happens, the failed graft material is removed, the site is allowed to heal for 3–6 months, and a second grafting procedure is performed. Graft failure does not mean the patient cannot eventually receive implants — it means the process takes longer. Picasso Dental Clinic does not charge for re-grafting procedures when the original graft was performed at the clinic and the patient complied with post-operative instructions.
Get Your Bone Augmentation Assessment
Send your X-ray or CBCT scan to Picasso's surgical team. You'll receive a detailed assessment of your bone volume, a treatment plan specifying whether grafting or sinus lift is needed, fixed pricing, and a recommended timeline — within 48 hours, at no cost.
WhatsApp: +84 989 067 888Sources & References
[1] Starch-Jensen et al. (2018). "Maxillary sinus floor augmentation: a review of selected treatment modalities." J Oral Maxillofac Res, 9(3).
[2] Tammam et al. (2023). "Dental implant survival in grafted and non-grafted bone: a systematic review and meta-analysis." Clin Oral Implants Res, 34(7).
[3] Tawil & Mawla (2021). "Lateral window sinus floor augmentation: a 20-year retrospective study." Int J Oral Maxillofac Implants, 36(5). n=210 implants, 97.1% survival.
[4] Khoury et al. (2022). "Bone substitutes in oral surgery: a systematic review of clinical outcomes." J Clin Periodontol, 49(S24).
[5] Miron et al. (2021). "Platelet-rich fibrin in bone regeneration: a systematic review and meta-analysis." Clin Oral Investig, 25(5).
[6] Pjetursson et al. (2019). "Maxillary sinus floor elevation using the transalveolar (osteotome) technique with or without grafting material." Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews.
[7] Del Fabbro et al. (2004). "Systematic review of survival rates of implants placed in the grafted maxillary sinus." J Dent Res. Meta-analysis of 6,913 implants.
[8] Aghaloo & Moy (2007). "Which hard tissue augmentation techniques are the most successful?" Int J Oral Maxillofac Implants, 22(Suppl):49–70.
[9] Jensen et al. (2020). ITI Treatment Guide Vol. 12: "Ridge Augmentation Procedures in Implant Patients — A Staged Approach."
[10] Geistlich Pharma AG. "Bio-Oss: Over 1,300 scientific publications." Product documentation and clinical evidence summary.
[11] Picasso Dental Clinic — published price list (2025–2026) and internal patient records (2013–2026, n = 70,000+).
Commercial Interest Declaration: This guide is published by Picasso Dental Clinic. All clinical data from external sources is referenced with citations. Readers should consider the publisher's commercial interest when evaluating recommendations.
Changelog
| Date | Version | Changes |
|---|---|---|
| 2026-03-05 | 1.0 | Initial publication — full guide covering bone graft types, sinus lift techniques, multi-country pricing, clinical evidence, healing timelines, candidacy, complication rates, and FAQ. |