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Continuous craniofacial growth in adult patients treated with dental implants in the anterior maxilla
BACKGROUND:
In the Literature, there are several studies demonstrating that infraposition happens also in adult patients.
PURPOSE:
To conduct a retrospective evaluation of infraocclusion of implant-retained crowns in the anterior maxilla of adult patients and of the patient awareness and perception of the problem.
MATERIAL AND METHODS:
From January to June 2017, all adult patients who in the last 5 to 20 years had received in the same clinic implant restorations in the upper anterior maxilla were recalled to assess the presence of crown infraocclusion. Ninety-four patients were recalled. Twenty-six males, 34 females, with 76 implants were included in the study. According to the age, patients were divided into group I (30 years: 14 males, 20 females). Digital photographs, taken at the time of final prosthesis delivery (T0) and at time of the study examination (T1) were compared by three blinded previously calibrated examiners. Cast models of the dental arches were taken at T1 and served as a reference for infraocclusion measurements. According to the Literature, cases were included in three categories: infraocclusion 1 mm. An awareness and perception score (APS) was prepared to classify patients in: "unaware patients" (0), "aware but disinterested patients" (1), "aware patients requiring explications" (2), and "aware patients requiring treatment" (3).
RESULTS:
Infraocclusion was present in 73.3% of all cases, 65.4% among males, 79.4% among females. Infraocclusion was less than 1 mm in 88.2% of males and in 85.1% of females. No significant differences were found for sex (P = .223). No significant differences were found for age: group I: 47.7%, group II: 52.2%, (P = .481). The overall APS was: "unaware patients" = 38.6%, "aware but disinterested patients" = 27.3%, "aware patients requiring explications" = 15.9%, "aware patients requiring treatment" = 18.2%
Infraposition of Implant-Retained Maxillary Incisor Crown Placed in an Adult Patient: Case Report
Several studies have clearly shown that osseointegrated implants, when inserted in growing bone, such as in adolescents, do not follow the eruptive path of adjacent teeth; instead, they act like ankylosed teeth, remaining in a stationary position for the lifetime, thus developing a progressive infraposition of the implant-supported crown. However, further studies have demonstrated that similar changes also occur in adult patients, although mostly in a small amount and over long time spans. Here the case of a female patient aged 35 years is presented, in which infraposition of the maxillary central incisor developed in a very short time (15 months). The treatment provided was a combined orthodontic/prosthetic approach with a 4-year follow-up
Rimodellamento osseo perimplantare:background scientifico e implicazioni cliniche
Il nuovo libro dei Dottori Canullo, Cocchetto e Loi è un manuale scritto assieme a più di dieci collaboratori.
Il contenuto esamina gli aspetti fondamentali dell'implantologia odontoiatrica per poi passare ai più moderni concetti del platform switching, del carico immediato e della piezochirurgia .
Il primo capitolo, corredato da ben 186 referenze bibliografiche, analizza i vari aspetti riguardanti il modellamento ed il rimodellamento dell'osso e i rischi ad esso collegati.
I fattori locali e sistemici inerenti al paziente sono identificati e valutati.
Sono altresi descritte le tre condizioni che maggiormente influiscono sul rimodellamento dell'osso peri-implantare, vale a dire i fattori chirurgici, sistemici e locali .
Il secondo capitolo verte maggiormente sugli aspetti clinici: il disegno del lembo e la stabilità del tessuto peri-implantari sono discussi alla luce dei concetti di biotipo e di ampiezza biologica.
Il terzo capitolo introduce il nuovo concetto della preaparazione minimamente invasiva del sito dell'impianto applicando le tecniche piezochirurgiche.
I due capitoli successivi sono dedicati al concetto di platform switching, che viene trattato sia da un punto di vista teorico che da un punto di vista pratico.
Grande enfasi è posta sulle conseguenze istologiche di questo concetto.
Molta attenzione è stata data agli stuid sull'analisi degli elementi finiti (FEA). Questi dovrebbero descrivere gli effetti del platform switching sui livelli marginali ossei attorno agli impianti. Bisogna comunque ricordare che la FEA non può descrivere perfettamente qusto tipo di fenomeni biologici dal momento che l'osso, essendo un tessuto vivente, non segue le regole matematiche applicate alla FEA.
Il sesto capitolo è incentrato sugli aspetti protesici dell'implantologia odontoiatrica .
Lo schema delle preparazioni, gli aspetti delle finishing lines ed i profili d'emergenza sono presentate in maniera dettagliata e le problematiche a loro collegate sono discusse.
Il capitolo successivo è incentrato sul ruolo dei protocolli protesici riguardanti la stabilità peri-implantare.
Gli aspetti biologici, tecnici e clinici sono discussi conseguentemente.
Molta attenzione è data alla protesizzazione provvisoria ed agli aspetti concernenti il paziente come la pianificazione e la riduzione del fastidio durante la riabilitazione protesica .
Infine l'ultimo capitolo si dedica al titanio, in qualità di materiale principe per l'implantologia odontoiatrica. Particolare enfasi è data alla pulizia delle superfici in titanio quale prerequisito per un'ottima funzionalità.
Per riassumere, il nuovo libro del Dottor Canullo e dei suoi co-autori fornisce una idea di trattamento di implantologia odontoiatrica che include platform switching ed una precisa assistenza protesica affinchè l'esito raggiunto sia un trattamento ottimale del paziente.
Il libro è scritto in maniera chiara e può essere raccomandato a tutti i colleghi di implantologia odontoiatrica.The new book of Dr Canullo, Cocchetto and Loi as an editor is a multi-author textbook with more than 10 contributing authors. The content stretches from basic aspects of implant dentistry all the way to the most modern concepts of platform switching, immediate implant placement and the application of piezo-surgery.
A well-documented (186 references) first basic chapter discusses the various aspects and risks affecting bone modeling and remodeling. Patient related systemic and local factors are identified and evaluated. Three conditions that definitely affect peri-implant bone remodeling, namely systemic, local and surgical factors are described.
In a more clinical, second chapter, flap design and peri-implant tissue stability are discussed in the light of the concept of the biotype and the biologic width.
The third chapter presents the novel concept of minimally invasive implant site preparation applying piezo-surgical techniques.
Quite a number of paragraphs in two comprehensive chapters are devoted to the platform switching concept. This is dealt with both from a theoretical as well as a practical point of view. Emphasis is placed on the histological consequences of this concept. A lot of attention, perhaps too much, is given to the studies on finite element analysis (FEA). These are supposed to describe the effects of platform switching on the marginal bone levels around implants. It has to be kept in mind, however, that FEA cannot reflect such biological phenomena owing to the fact that bone as a living tissue does not follow the mathematical rules that are applied with FEA.
Chapter six is devoted to the prosthetic aspects of implant dentistry. Design of preparations, aspects of finishing lines and emergence profiles are presented in a comprehensive way and pertinent issues are addressed. The clinical concept of a “shoulderless” abutment is discussed. The chapter is illustrated with a few relevant clinical cases to support single issues.
Another chapter presents the role of prosthetic protocols on peri-implant stability. Biological, technical and clinical aspects are discussed in harmony. A lot of attention is given to the temporarisation and to patient-centred aspects such as scheduling and reduction of discomfort during prosthetic rehabilitation.
Finally, the last chapter is devoted to titanium as a material of choice for implant dentistry. Emphasis is given to the cleaning of titanium surfaces as a prerequisite for optimal function.
In summary, the new book by Luigi Canullo and his co-workers provides a implant dentistry treatment concept that includes platform switching and strict prosthetic guidance to reach optimal treatment outcomes. The book is written in a lucid way and may be recommended to all colleagues who are involved in implant dentistry
”one abutment-one time”: optimizing platform-switching concept. 3-year controlled prospective study
Background:
The “platform-switching” concept showed better peri-implant crestal bone preservation in post-extraction immediately restored implants when compared to matching diameter abutment configuration. However repeated abutment dis/reconnections during restorative procedures from provisional to final crown could produce apical shifting of peri-implant tissues.
Aim:
Aim of this controlled prospective study was to evaluate on bone levels (MBL) the influence of restoration using immediately definitive abutments (one abutment-one time concept) versus provisional abutment later replaced by a definitive abutment.
Materials and methods:
26 patients with 26 hopeless maxillary premolars received a post-extraction wide diameter implant.
Immediately after insertion, 11 patients (Control Group, CG) were immediately restored using a platform-switched provisional titanium abutment. In 15 patients (Test Group, TG), definitive platform-switched titanium abutments were tightened.
In both groups, provisional crowns were adapted, avoiding occlusal contacts.
All implants were definitively restored after 3 months: for the final impression, in CG, traditional impression technique with coping transfer was adopted, dis/reconnecting abutments several times; in TG, metal prefabricated coping was used and final restoration was seated avoiding abutment disconnection.
Digital standardized periapical radiographs using a customized film holder were recorded at baseline (T 0 = implant insertion), final restoration (T1=3 months after), 18 (T2) and 36 months (T3) follow-ups. The MBL was evaluated with a computerized measuring technique applied to radiographs.
Digital subtraction radiography software was used to evaluate radiographic density of bone tissue around implants.
The Student’s t-Test (confidence level: P<0.05) was selected to identify differences between test and control groups at different follow-ups concerning MBL values.
Results:
In the CG peri-implant bone resorption was 0.41mm (SD=0.15mm) at T1, 0.38mm (SD=0.12mm) at T2, 0.53mm (SD = 0.13mm) at T3.
In the TG, on average, peri-implant bone resorption was 0.59 mm (SD=0.19mm) at T1, 0.31mm (SD=0.11mm) at T2, 0.32mm (SD = 0.16mm) at T3.
Statistically significant difference between groups was only found at T3.
At the same follow-up period, higher density in radiographic bone appearance around implant neck was recorded in the TG compared to CG.
Conclusions and clinical implications:
The implant/abutment stability following the minimally invasive prosthetic strategy adopted (“platform-switching” and “one abutment- one time”) could longitudinally produce additional hard tissue preservation compared to implants restored according to “platform-switching” only.
Despite of the encouraging data reported, however, controlled clinical studies on larger patient sample and histologic investigations are required to confirm this hypothesis, analyzing biologic mechanism
Evaluation of hard tissue response around wider platform-switched implants.
The use of a narrower-diameter abutment over a larger-diameter implant platform has been shown to decrease peri-implant bone resorption. This technique, known as platform switching, shifts the implant-abutment microgap inward. The aim of this study was to examine whether shifting the microgap further inward by increasing the discrepancy between the implant platform and abutment diameter would result in a decrease in crestal bone loss. Ten patients requiring mandibular or maxillary implant restorations were included in this study. The inclusion criteria called for an alveolar crest thickness of at least 8.0 mm at the implant placement site. Fifteen Certain PREVAIL implants with a body diameter of 5.0 mm, an expanded platform feature with a maximum diameter of 5.8 mm at the collar, and a prosthetic seating surface of 5.0 mm were used in lengths of 8.5, 10.0, 11.5, or 13.0 mm. The implants were connected to 4.1-mm healing abutments in a single-stage protocol. Periapical radiographs taken before and immediately after surgery, 8 weeks after implant placement, immediately after definitive prosthesis insertion, and at 12 and 18 months after loading revealed an average peri-implant bone loss of 0.30 mm. Increasing the discrepancy between the diameter of the implant platform and the restorative abutment may lead to a decrease in the amount of subsequent coronal bone loss
Hard and soft tissue responses to the platform-switching technique.
Platform switching is a concept recently introduced in implant dentistry. It is intended to reduce the crestal bone loss that is commonly found around implants exposed to the oral environment. The aim of this study was to examine biopsy specimens to help explain the biologic processes occurring around a platform-switched implant. A mandibular implant was removed 2 months after placement because of prosthetic rehabilitation difficulties. The implant was then sectioned and subjected to histologic and histomorphometric analysis. An inflammatory connective tissue infiltrate was localized over the entire surface of the implant platform and approximately 0.35 mm coronal to the implant-abutment junction, along the healing abutment. A possible reason for bone preservation around a platform-switched implant may lie in the inward shift of the inflammatory connective tissue zone at the implant-abutment junction, which reduces its injurious effect on the alveolar bone
Soft and hard tissue response to an implant with a convergent collar in the esthetic area: preliminary report at 18 months
AIM: The purpose of this prospective cohort study was to investigate, over an 18-month period, soft and hard tissue response to a transmucosal implant with a convergent collar inserted in the anterior maxillary esthetic area.MATERIALS AND METHODS: From June 2013 to January 2014, 14 consecutive patients were enrolled (7 men and 7 women; mean age 63.7 ± 14 years) with 20 implants, needing at least one implant-supported restoration between the canines in the maxillary anterior esthetic area. Six months after hopeless tooth extraction and an alveolar socket graft, a transmucosal-type implant with convergent collar walls was inserted in a midcrestal position with mini-flap surgery. An impression was taken 2 months later, and a definitive abutment with a provisional restoration was positioned. The final restoration was seated 2 weeks later. Clinical parameters, photographs, radiographs, and impressions were taken at this timepoint, and after 6 and 18 months. Using dedicated software, radiographic analysis (to detect marginal bone-level changes) and cast analysis (to detect soft tissue vertical and horizontal changes) were performed.RESULTS: At the 18-month follow-up, all implants were clinically osseointegrated, stable, and showed no sign of infection. At baseline, interproximal radiographs revealed no bone defect around the implant. After an initial minimal bone loss (0.09 ± 0.144 mm), radiographic analysis showed a stable condition of bone remodeling (mean value 0.09 ± 0.08; range 0.0 to 0.5 mm) at the 18-month follow-up. No statistically significant horizontal dimensional changes of the alveolar ridge were observed between each timepoint. Mean soft tissue levels significantly improved between baseline and 18 months. The mean heights of the mesial papilla (MP) and distal papilla (DP) changes were 0.38 ± 0.22 and 0.47 ± 0.31, respectively. The level of the labial gingival margin (LGM) was 1.01 ± 0.63. Periodontal parameters never exceeded the physiological levels.CONCLUSIONS: Within the limitations of this preliminary study, the analyzed implants produced positive results in these esthetically demanding cases. This outcome should encourage long-term studies in order to assess, through controlled clinical trials, whether this convergent collar design offers advantages over other designs. Furthermore, due to the peculiar crestal module, together with the use of delayed implant insertion and a postextraction ridge preservation technique with biomimetic hydroxyapatite, the analyzed implants seem to help prevent the negative bone remodeling typically associated with two-piece implant systems, but without the well-known drawbacks of traditionally designed transmucosal implants. Therefore, wherever crestal bone preservation is a critical issue for clinical success in the anterior maxillary area can be considered of particular interest
Immediate positioning of a definitive abutment versus repeated abutment replacements in post-extractive implants: 3-year follow-up of a randomised multicentre clinical trial
Purpose: The aim of this randomised clinical trial was to evaluate the influence of restoration on marginal bone loss (MBL) using immediately definitive abutments (one abutment-one time concept) versus provisional abutments later replaced by definitive abutments. Materials and methods: In three private clinics, 32 patients with 32 hopeless maxillary premolars were selected for post-extractive implant-supported immediate restoration and randomised to provisional abutment (PA) and definitive abutment (DA) groups, 16 sites in each group. After tooth extraction, 7 patients had to be excluded for buccal wall fracture at tooth extraction or lack of sufficient primary implant stability ( < 35 Ncm). The remaining 25 patients (10 PA, 15 DA) received a post-extractive wide-diameter implant. Immediately after insertion, the PA group were immediately restored using a platform-switched provisional titanium abutment. In the DA group, definitive platform-switched titanium abutments were tightened. In both groups, provisional crowns were adapted, avoiding occlusal contacts. All implants were definitively restored after 3 months. In the PA group, a traditional impression technique with coping transfer was adopted, dis/reconnecting abutments several times; in the DA group, metal prefabricated copings were used and final restorations were seated, avoiding abutment disconnection. Digital standardised periapical radiographs using a customised film holder were recorded at baseline (T0 = implant insertion), final restoration (T1 = 3 months later), and at 18-month (T2) and 3-year (T3) follow-ups. The MBL was evaluated with a computerised measuring technique and digital subtraction radiography (DSR) software was used to evaluate radiographic density. Results: At the 3-year follow-up a success rate of 100% in both groups was reported. In the PA group, peri-implant bone resorption was 0.36 mm at T1, 0.43 mm at T2, and 0.55 mm at T3. In the DA group, peri-implant bone resorption was 0.35 mm at T1, 0.33 mm at T2, and 0.34 mm at T3. Statistically significant lower bone losses were found at T2 (0.1 mm) and T3 (0.2 mm) for the DA group. At T3, significantly higher DSR values around implant necks were recorded in the DA group (72 ± 5.0) when compared with the PA group (52 ± 9.5). Conclusions: The current trial suggests that the 'one abutment-one time' concept might be a possible additional strategy in post-extraction immediately restored platform-switched single implants to further minimise peri-implant crestal bone resorption, although a 0.2 mm difference may not have any clinical effect. Additional clinical trials with larger groups of patients should be performed to better investigate this hypothesis
Clinical evaluation of an improved cementation technique for implant-supported restorations: a randomized controlled trial
Abstract
Background: Cement remnants were frequently associated with peri-implantitis. Recently, a
shoulderless abutment was proposed, raising some concern about cement excess removal.
Aim: To compare different cementation techniques for implant-supported restorations assessing
the amount of cement remnants in the peri-implant sulcus. Additional aim was to compare the
effect of these cementation techniques using two different abutment designs.
Material & methods: Forty-six patients requiring double implant-supported restoration in the
posterior maxilla were randomly divided in two groups according to the cementation modality:
intraoral and extraoral. According to the abutment finishing line, implants in each patient were
randomly assigned to shoulderless or chamfer subgroup. In the intraoral group, crowns were
directly seated onto the titanium abutment. In the extraoral group, crowns were firstly seated onto
a resin abutment replica and immediately removed, then cleansed of the cement excess and finally
seated on the titanium abutment. After cement setting, in both groups, cement excess was
carefully tried to remove. Three months later, framework/abutment complexes were disconnected
and prepared for microscopic analysis: surface occupied by exposed cement remnants and marginal
gaps were measured. Additionally, crown/abutment complexes were grinded, and voids of cement
were measured at abutment/crown interface. Related-samples Friedman’s two-way analysis of
variance by ranks was used to detect differences between groups and subgroups (P ≤ 0.5).
Results: At the end of the study, a mean value of 0.45 mm2 ( 0.80), 0.38 mm2 ( 0.84), and
0.065 mm2 ( 0.13) and 0.07 mm2 ( 0.15) described surface occupied by cement remnants in
shoulderless and chamfer abutment with intraoral cementation and shoulderless and chamfer
abutment with extraoral cementation, respectively. A mean value of 0.40 mm2 ( 0.377), 0.41 mm2
( 0.39) and 0.485 mm2 ( 0.47) and 0.477 mm2 ( 0.43) described cement voids at the abutment/
crown interface; a mean value of 0.062 mm ( 0.03), 0.064 mm ( 0.35), 0.055 mm ( 0.016) and
0.054 mm ( 0.024) described marginal gaps. Statistics showed tendency of intraoral cementation to
have significantly higher cement remnants compared with abutments with extraoral cementation
groups. At the same time, the presence of voids was significantly higher in case of extraoral
cementation. No significant differences between groups for the variable “gap”.
Conclusions: Despite the presence of more voids, extraoral cementation reduces cement excess.
However, using low adhesivity cement and careful cement removal, a very limited quantity of
cement remnants was observed also in the intraoral cementatio
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