Influence of the Apico-coronal Position of Tissue-level Implants on Marginal Bone Stability
Overview
- Phase
- Not Applicable
- Intervention
- Not specified
- Conditions
- Bone Atrophy, Alveolar
- Sponsor
- International Piezosurgery Academy
- Enrollment
- 50
- Locations
- 2
- Primary Endpoint
- early marginal bone loss
- Status
- Completed
- Last Updated
- 3 years ago
Overview
Brief Summary
early marginal bone loss around dental implants may hamper long term prognosis of implant-prosthetic rehabilitation. this study aimed to study the correlation of pico-coronal position of dental implant (from supracrestal, crystal to undergone level) measuring early marginal bone loss through periapical x-ray at surgical time and subsequent follow-ups.
Detailed Description
Early marginal bone loss (EMBL) is a non-infective remodeling process of peri-implant crestal bone occurring within the first year after implant insertion. EMBL has a multifactorial etiology, being influenced by various surgical and prosthetic factors, including insufficient crestal width, surgical trauma, biological width formation, microbial colonization of implant-abutment micro-gap, horizontal implant-abutment mismatch ("the platform-switching concept"), the number of abutment connection/disconnections, prosthetic abutment height, design and mechanical stability of implant-abutment connection and adaptive response to occlusal loading. Biological width formation is the main factor influencing peri-implant marginal bone adaptive processes prior to prosthesis delivery. When an implant gets exposed to the oral cavity, soft tissues establish a cuff-like barrier sealing the trans-epithelial component of the fixture. Differently from equicrestal and subcrestal implants, which present a microgap between implant and abutment at the marginal bone level, tissue-level implants have no gap at this region. The present multicenter prospective study aims to evaluate if EMBL occurring around tissue-level dental implants before prosthesis delivery may be reduced by adapting apico-coronal positioning in relation to supracrestal tissue thickness. All patients are treated according to one-stage implant. Sutures are removed 12-14 days after surgery. No removable prostheses are utilized during the healing period. Final impressions were taken five months after the implant placement. After functional and aesthetic try-in, a single-unit screw-retained metal ceramic crown is delivered. The fixation screw was torqued to 30Ncm following manufacturer's guidelines. Screw access is then closed using light-cured composite resin. Radiographic measurements. Digital radiographs, customized for each patient with a bite jig, are taken using a long-cone paralleling technique with a film holder at the time of implant placement (baseline, T0), 3 months after implant placement (T1), and 5 months after implant placement, immediately before impression taking (T2). All radiographs are performed using the same x-ray generator technology, set with the same parameters (60 kV, 7 mA). Two different types of bone changes are calculated, as suggested elsewhere. 1. Early marginal bone loss (EMBL) is calculated. 2. Bone Loss Exposing Implant Surface (BLEIS) is calculated as the difference between the EMBL measurement and the 3 mm length of the transmucosal, machined portion of the implant. Radiographs demonstrating any deformation, darkness and/or other problem are immediately repeated. All measurements are made by a single calibrated examiner, blind to mucosal thickness, using a 30-inch led-backlit color diagnostic display with Kodak Digital Imaging Software. Each measurement is repeated three times at three different time points as proposed by Gomez-Roman and Launer. Intra-examiner and inter-examiner concordances are 96.1% and 90.4%, respectively, for linear measurements within ±0.1mm.
Investigators
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria
- •Patients were partially edentulous and required placement of at least one single delayed implant in pristine bone in the posterior mandible
- •presence of keratinized mucosa with a minimum bucco-lingual width of 3 mm;
- •bone crest with at least 6mm of width and 9 mm of height above the mandibular canal without concomitant or previous bone augmentation procedures;
- •presence of the opposing dentition
Exclusion Criteria
- •uncontrolled periodontitis
- •medication consumption for at least 3 months prior to treatment
- •history of head or neck radiation therapy
- •pregnancy or lactating at any time during the study
Outcomes
Primary Outcomes
early marginal bone loss
Time Frame: 5 months after implant placement
distance from crystal bone to most coronal bone to implant contact
Secondary Outcomes
- biological complications(during surgery)