Journal Club CE Quiz 2017-1 PAGE

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Leadership Donors to The LSUHSC Foundation Department of Periodontics Fund may be granted credit for continuing education hours after completing a short online quiz at the end of each journal club session. All participants must complete the Evaluation and Opinion Questionnaire form provided at the bottom of each quiz.  CE certificates will be emailed usually within 2 weeks following quiz submission. CE Records will be maintained by the site administrator for a period of 5 years.  The CE opportunity is not open to the the dental community in general.  It is limited strictly to donors of The LSUHSC Foundation.

This continuing education opportunity is not affiliated with The Louisiana Academy of Continuing Education from LSU Health New Orleans Continuing Dental Education. Additional advanced education opportunities from them may be found at: https://www.lsucde.org

CONTINUING EDUCATION CREDIT
CE credit awarded for a participation in a course or activity may not apply toward license renewal in all states. It is the responsibility of each participant to verify the requirements of his or her state licensing board.

Questions

DesignedBy StevenJ. Spindler, DDS LLC

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Journal Club CE Quiz 2016-8

HOME 

Leadership Donors to The LSUHSC Foundation Department of Periodontics Fund may be granted credit for continuing education hours after completing a short online quiz at the end of each journal club session. All participants must complete the Evaluation and Opinion Questionnaire form provided at the bottom of each quiz.  CE certificates will be emailed usually within 2 weeks following quiz submission. CE Records will be maintained by the site administrator for a period of 5 years.  The CE opportunity is not open to the the dental community in general.  It is limited strictly to donors of The LSUHSC Foundation.

This continuing education opportunity is not affiliated with The Louisiana Academy of Continuing Education from LSU Health New Orleans Continuing Dental Education. Additional advanced education opportunities from them may be found at: https://www.lsucde.org

CONTINUING EDUCATION CREDIT
CE credit awarded for a participation in a course or activity may not apply toward license renewal in all states. It is the responsibility of each participant to verify the requirements of his or her state licensing board.

Questions

DesignedBy StevenJ. Spindler, DDS LLC

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Implants – Treatment Planning II

HOME Implant Home 

 Medical History: Effects of Age, Perio compromised patients

Age at Placement (growth);

  1. Oesterle LJ, Cronin RJ Jr. Adult growth, aging, and the single-tooth implant. Int J Oral Maxillofac Implants 2000;15(2):252-260.

  2. Cronin RJ Jr, Oesterle LJ. Implant use in growing patients. Treatment planning concerns. Dent Clin North Am 1998;42(1):1-34.

  3. Cronin RJ Jr, Oesterle LJ, Ranly DM. Mandibular implants and the growing patient. Int J Oral Maxillofac Implants 1994;9(1):55-62.

  4. Oesterle LJ, Cronin RJ Jr, Ranly DM. Maxillary implants and the growing patient. Int J Oral Maxillofac Implants 1993;8(4):377-387.

  5. Heij D eta al: Facial development, continuous tooth eruption and mesial drift as compromising factors for implant placement. Int J Ora Maxillofac Implants. 2006 Nov-Dec; 21(6)867-78

  6. Fudalej P., Kokich V., Leroux B: Determinig the cessation of vertical growth of the craniofacial structures to facilitate placement of single-tooth implants. Am J Orthod Dentofacial Orthop. 2007 Apr; 131 (4 Suppl):S59-67

  7. Heuberer S, Dvorak G, Mayer C, Watzek G, Zechner W. Dental implants are a viable alternative for compensating oligodontia in adolescents. Clin Oral Implants Res. 2014 Jan 3. doi: 10.1111/clr.12323. [Epub ahead of print]

Age at placement (outcome):

  1. Heij DG, Opdebeeck H, van Steenberghe D, Quirynen M. Age as compromising factor for implant insertion. Periodontol 2000 2003; 33:172-184.

  2. Meijer HJ, Batenburg RH, Raghoebar GM. Influence of patient age on the success rate of dental implants supporting an overdenture in an edentulous mandible: a 3-year prospective study. Int J Oral Maxillofac Implants. 2001 Jul-Aug;16(4):522-6.

  3. Moy PK, Medina D, Shetty V, Aghaloo TL. Dental implant failure rates and associated risk factors. Int J Oral Maxillofac Implants. 2005 Jul-Aug;20(4):569-77

  4. Schwartz-Arad D, Bichacho N. Effect of Age on Single Implant Submersion Rate in the Central Maxillary Incisor Region: A Long-Term Retrospective Study. Clin Implant Dent Relat Res. 2013 Aug 5. doi: 10.1111/cid.12131. [Epub ahead of print]

Periodontal disease

  1. Wennstrom, Lang. Treatment planning for Implant Therapy in the Periodontally Compromised Patient. (CH 22). Clinical Periodontology and Implant Dentistry, Lindhe, J.; Lang, K. 5th Edition, 2008, Blackwell Munksgaard (Volume 2).

  2. Karoussis IK, Kotsovilis S, Fourmousis I. A comprehensive and critical review of dental implant prognosis in periodontally compromised partially edentulous patients. Clin Oral Implants Res. 2007 Dec;18(6):669-79

  3. Karroussis, I et al: A comprehensive and critical review of dental implant prognosis in periodontally compromised partially edentulous patients. Clin Oral Impl. Res 18, 2007; 669-679

  4. Ong CT, Ivanovski S, et al. Systematic review of implant outcomes in treated periodontitis subjects. J Clin Periodontol. 2008 May;35(5):438-62.

  5. Mengel R, Flores-de-Jacoby L. Implants in patients treated for generalized aggressive and chronic periodontitis: a 3-year prospective longitudinal study. J Periodontol. 2005 Apr;76(4):534-43.

  6. Kim KK, Sung HM. Outcomes of dental implant treatment in patients with generalized aggressive periodontitis: a systematic review. J Adv Prosthodont. 2012 Nov;4(4):210-7.

  7. Roccuzzo M, Bonino L, Dalmasso P, Aglietta M. Long-term results of a three arms prospective cohort study on implants in periodontally compromised patients: 10-year data around sandblasted and acid-etched (SLA) surface. Clin Oral Implants Res. 2013 Jul 19. doi: 10.1111/clr.12227. [Epub ahead of print]


Topic:Skeletal growth and implant placement.

Authors: Oesterle LJ, Cronin RJ Jr.

Title:Adult growth, aging, and the single-tooth implant

Source: Int J Oral Maxillofac Implants 2000;15(2):252-260.

Type: Discussion

Rating: Good

PURPOSE: This paper addresses growth of the maxilla and the development of the maxillary dentition in the context of implant treatment

Maxillary Skeletal Growth

  • Anteroposterior Skeletal Changes. The midface grows generally in a downward and forward direction (arrow) relative to the anterior cranial base

Maxillary enlargement is variable between individuals and is particularly important to implant behavior. The jaw of patient V132 grew more downward than forward, while the jaw of patient V177 grew more forward than downward

  • Transverse Skeletal Changes.As transverse growth of the cranial base occurs, the midface expands in harmony, first at the sagittal sutures that run from the metopic suture of the frontal bone back to the foramen magnum, and later by drift remodeling after the sutures close.

Growth in width of the median suture accelerates at puberty and is the most significant factor in transverse growth of the maxilla.

The average increase in maxillary bone width varies from 5 to 8 mm from 4 years of age to adulthood. The increase in molar width was approximately 1 mm less than the maxillary increase

Transverse maxillary growth changes are not symmetric at the midpalatal suture. The increase in width at the posterior portion of the suture (6.7 mm) is three times the amount of increase at the anterior portion of the palate from 4 years of age to adulthood. This rotation results in the molars growing not only laterally, but also anteriorly, contributing to the decrease in arch length seen during development.

Vertical Skeletal Changes.Vertical growth of the maxilla occurs by sutural lowering (passive displacement) of the maxilla and apposition on the occlusal surfaces of the maxillary alveolus.

Mean growth changes from 4 years to adult:

O = amount of apposition at floor of the orbit.

Su = amount of sutural lowering of maxilla, which would carry an implant downward with the growth.

C = amount of apposition at the infrazygomatic crest, carrying the maxilla downward.

R = amount of resorptive lowering of the nasal floor.

A = the amount of appositional increase in the height of the alveolar process.

Vertical maxillary growth would dramatically affect an implant’s position. An implant placed in the growing maxilla at 4 years of age would behave like an ankylosed tooth. Increases in alveolar height by apposition and resorptive lowering of the nasal floor have the greatest effect on the implant. The osseointegrated implant would remain stationary in the alveolus, being buried by appositional bone growth on its occlusal surface and being exposed on its apical surface by resorptive lowering of the nasal cavity and sinuses. The closer to adulthood the implant is placed, the less the adverse effect.

Maxillary Dental Growth

  • Transverse Dental Changes: While dental width changes vary little with the primary dentition, a significant change in arch width occurs with eruption of the permanent teeth. In general, males have a greater increase in the molar areas than females.

Transverse dental changes. The arch width in the lateral incisor area increases 6 mm as the permanent incisors erupt, followed by a 1-mm decrease in width from 9 to 14 years of age but with little

change after 14 years of age, for a net increase of 5 mm

  • Anteroposterior Dental Changes.

A significant mesial shift of the teeth is seen relative to the body of the maxilla. Hence, while the maxillary dental arch increases in width, it also decreases anteroposteriorly in length and moves anteriorly as a unit.

Anteroposterior dental changes. Mesial repositioning of the maxillary dentition occurs during growth with 5 mm of change in the incisor area and nearly 4 mm in the permanent molar area reported in some studies. the molars moving mesially 5 mm and maxillary central incisors moving 2.5 mm. The decreased amount of incisor movement results in a “packing” of the incisors against the musculature with possible resultant crowding

  • Vertical Dental Changes.

Changes in the height of the palate partially reflect the increase in alveolar height. The results of studies are variable in their findings; however, in general there is an increase in palatal height as seen on dental casts

Much of the increase in total dental height increase is caused by the larger size of the permanent teeth as compared to the primary teeth. Most studies report an increase in posterior palatal height of from 4 to 6 mm, with more growth in males than in females. One study found an increase of only 2.5 mm in height

Maxillary Growth and the Osseointegrated Implant

  • As the maxilla moves downward and forward with growth, the alveolar process undergoes considerable remodeling and conformational changes.

  • An osseointegrated implant placed in the posterior alveolus of a young, growing maxilla may become significantly buried in bone, and its apical portion may become exposed as the nasal floor remodels occlusally.

  • Prostheses that cross the midpalatal suture and arc attached to implants may potentially restrict transverse growth.

  • Implants located on opposite sides of the midpalatal suture of a prepubertal child would be carried apart a significant distance by transverse growth.

Recommendations for the Placement of Implants in the Maxilla

  • Implants placed before the cessation of growth are unpredictable in their behavior

  • Rigid transpalatal prostheses in the prepubertal or early pubertal patient should be avoided to allow unrestricted transverse maxillary growth. Implants placed during the pubertal period have a greater likelihood of success, but still less than the postpubertal or postgrowth implant

  • The variation in growth from individual to individual in the amount and direction of change is great

  • Careful attention to maxillary growth and development will enable the dental implant team to provide the best possible care to the dentally disadvantaged young patient.

Topic:Age and implant placement

Authors: Cronin RJ Jr, Oesterle LJ

Title: Implant use in growing patients. Treatment planning concerns..

Source: Dent Clin North Am 1998;42(1):1-34.

Type: Discussion article:

Rating: Good

Keywords: age, growth, wrist

Discussion article:

  • Maxillary growth: the midface grows in a downward and forward direction relative to the anterior cranial face. Maxillary growth occurs as a result of both passive displacement and enlargement.

  • The average size of the dental arches is generally greater in males than in females. Female growth is nearly completed by age 15 and males growing is longer (age 17 to 19) and at a greater rate.

  • Tooth eruption and alveolar growth must be viewed as a negative factor in the placement of DI.

  • Implants in boys should be delayed longer than in adolescent girls.

  • The increase of alveolar height continue with eruption of the permanent incisors

  • The mandible grows downward and forward.

  • The mandible grows in length by growth at the condyle and ramus.

  • To accommodate posterior tooth eruption, the body of the mandible increases in length by resorption on the anterior aspect of the mandible and deposition on its posterior aspect.

  • As the mandible increases in length, it also increases in posterior width because of its V shape.

  • Girls generally erupt their teeth 2y earlier than boys.

  • Generally when the girls start menstruation, their growth is nearly complete. By age 15, most girls have nearly completed their growth, where areas many boys continue to grow into their early 20’s.

  • The longer growth period for males results in more prominent lower jaw and straighter profile seen in males.

  • There is no totally reliable indicator as to when growth has ceased. In fact long term studies indicate that growth never stops but continuous throughout life in the same direction as in adolescence but at a much reduce rate.

  • Long bone growth, particularly in the bones in the hand and wrist, is an indicator commonly used to male an educated guess of the status growth of the pt.

Topic: Mandibular growth and implants

Authors: Cronin RJ Jr, Oesterle LJ, Ranly DM.

Title: Mandibular implants and the growing patient.

Source: Int J Oral Maxillofac Implants 1994;9(1):55-62.

Type:Commentary

Rating: Good

Keywords: dental implants, growth and development, mandibular growth, osseointegration

Purpose:To discuss growth of the mandible and how this can affect implant placement in a growing patient.

Discussion:

Mandibular Growth Changes:

Anteroposterior growth:The mandible lengthens almost exclusively by posterosuperior growth of the condyle and posterior growth of the ramus. Ramus height is increasing 1-2 mm per year. Mandibular anterior width stabilizes relatively early and only increases slightly by appositional growth.

Rotational growth:The mandible exhibits a rotational pattern as it grows. The mandible “rolls” downward and forward. The center of rotation is situated near the incisal region. The goal is to upright the ramus, flatten the mandibular plane, and decrease the gonial angle. Patients can also have little rotational component. Children with a strong rotational pattern, implants would be carried inferior with the rolling pattern of the mandible and buried within the alveolar process. Implants could also be deficient in height and/or positioned at nonesthetic and nonfunctional inclinations.

Transverse changes:Changes in arch width vary greatly from individual to individual. It is impossible to predict intercanine width at age 15 based on intercanine mesaurements taken at 4-5 years old.

Dental height changes:From years 9—15 there is a steady increase in height of both incisors and molars. Measurements from the mandibular plane to the menton increases 12 mm in males and almost 7 mm in females between he ages of 6 and 16.

Arch length changes:Arch length changes occur as the mandible grows, the amount of cange varies with the direction of growth.

Mandibular changes and the Osseointegrated implant: Mandibular midline implants have a better prognosis in a young patient than those placed in other areas of the mandible. Prosthesis design must allow for the average increase in dental height of 5-6 mm and for the anteroposterior variation caused by different directions of growth. The burying of an implant because of occlusal alveolar bone apposition is possible in both the posterior and anterior segments. This can be exacerbated by an unfavorable rotational growth pattern. Girls grow actively until 14-15 years of age while boys grow longer and more abundantly until 17-18 years old.

Recommendations:

Whenever possible implant placement should be delayed until after age 15 for girls and age 18 for boys. The parents and patient should have informed consent that implants placed at an early age may not be “permanent” and may have to be reimplanted. If an implant is adversely affected by growth or causing adverse growth, it should be removed while the surgery is still uncomplicated.

Conclusion:When placed in the growing patient, dental implants should be closely monitored and carefully restored with implant prosthesis designed to accommodate growth and development. Implants placed after age 15 in girls and 18 in boys have the most predictable prognosis.

Topic:Age of Placement

Authors: Oesterle LJ, Cronin RJ Jr, Ranly DM

Title:Maxillary implants and the growing patient.

Source:Int J Oral Maxillofac Implants 1993;8(4):377-387.

Type:Review

Rating: Good

Keywords:dental implants, maxillary growth, osseointegration

Purpose: To addresses growth of the maxilla and the development of the maxillary dentition in the context of implant treatment.

Discussion:Maxillary skeletal and dental growth results in dramatic changes in all three dimensions during active growth. Experimental evidence and the behavior of ankylosed teeth suggest that an osseointegrated object remains stationary in the bone surrounding it and does not move or adapt to bone remodeling. Growth changes may result in the burying or loss of implants depending on the placement site. Hence, implants placed in the early mixed dentition have a poor prognosis of continued usefulness through puberty. When placed early, implants may disturb growth or have to be replaced. Implants placed during late puberty or early adulthood have the best change for long-term usefulness.

Conclusion: Osseointegrated implants in the maxilla of growing patients must be undertaken with a great deal of caution. Implants placed before the cessation of growth are unpredictable in their behavior.

Topic:Implants in younger individuals/children

Author:Heij D eta al

Title:Facial development, continuous tooth eruption and mesial drift as compromisisng factors for implant placement.

Source:Int J Ora Maxillofac Implants. 2006 Nov-Dec; 21(6)867-

Type:Discussion article

Rating:Good

Keywords:Implants, growing skeleton, implants in children

Discussion:

The replacement of teeth lost by children can be an important indication for early implant therapy. Osseointegrated dental implants, like ankylosed teeth, alter position as growth-related changes occur within the jawbones (displacement, remodeling, mesial drift). It has been shown that implants do not follow the growth/change of the alveolar process such as natural teeth. Skeletal growth in the close vicinity around implants are slowed, whereas they continue as normal pace elsewhere. Thus bony defects, occlusal scheme dysfunctions and adjacent tooth complications are seen. 

Facial growth of the child and even of the adolescent, as well as the continuous eruption of the adjacent anterior teeth, create significant risk of a less favorable esthetic and/or functional outcome. Jaw bone growth: Both the mandible and the axilla follow a distinct chronology: growth is first completed in the transversal plane, then in the sagittal plane, and finally, only at a later stage, in the coronal plane. The growth of the mandible is closely associated with growth in stature, whereas growth for the maxilla is more associated with growth of the cranial structures. Maxilla: intercanine arch width increases minimally after 10 years (0.9mm average), sagittal growth of maxilla typically is resorptive therefore implants placed in the anterior maxilla can come across the complication of buccal plate resorption and implant dehiscence, vertical growth of maxilla persists to 17-18 years of age in females, perhaps longer for males therefore until the age of 18 (approx.) there may be vertical plane issues. Mandible: transverse growth completes early in anterior region whereas continue substantially in premolar and molar region, therefore if implants are placed in that region before growth cease implants could result lingually, vertical growth is substantial for mandible and is therefore can be affected by presence of dental implants. For patients with a normal facial profile, the placement of an implant should be postponed until skeletal growth is complete. For patients with a short or long face type, further growth, especially the continuous eruption of adjacent teeth, creates a serious risk even after the age of 25 years. 

In order to determine proper timing for implant placement in adolescents/young adults it was suggested to examine:

Topic:  Treatment planning- Skeletal growth

Authors:Fudalej P., Kokich V., Leroux B:

Title: Determining the cessation of vertical growth of the craniofacial structures to facilitate placement of single-tooth implants.

Source: Am J Orthod Dentofacial Orthop. 2007 Apr; 131 (4 Suppl):S59-67

Type: Retrospective study

Rating: Good

Keywords: dental implant, cephalograms, puberty, facial skeleton growth

Background: Single-tooth implants are commonly used to replace congenitally missing teeth in adolescent orthodontic patients. However, if implants are placed before cessation of facial growth, they will submerge relative to the adjacent erupting teeth. Therefore, it is important to know when facial growth is complete in postpubertal orthodontic patients.

Purpose: To determine and quantify the amount of vertical growth of the facial skeleton and the amount of eruption of the central incisors and the maxillary first molars after puberty.

Methods:

Two or 3 lateral cephalograms taken at pretreatment, posttreatment, and 10 years post retention of 142 males and 159 females were evaluated. Linear regression models were used to determine changes in the parameters with increasing age.

Results:

The findings indicate that

(1) the growth of the facial skeleton continues after puberty

(2) there is a difference in the amount of growth between the sexes during the second decade of life, and after age 20 the intergender difference is substantially diminished

(3) the rate of eruption of the maxillary central incisors in females seems to be greater than in males.

Conclusion:

The growth of the facial skeleton continues after puberty, but the amount of growth decreases steadily and after the second decade of life seems to be clinically insignificant.

Topic:implants in young pts

Authors:HeubererS, Dvorak G, Mayer C, Watzek G, Zechner W

Title:Dental implants are a viable alternative for compensating oligodontia in adolescents.

Source: Clin Oral Implants Res. Jan 3. doi: 10.1111/clr.12323.

Type:clinical

Rating: good

Keywords:children, growth, young dentition

Purpose: To clinically and radiographically evaluate dental implant treatment in adolescents

with extensive oligodontia.

Methods: Patients with more than nine permanent teeth congenitally missing and implant

treatment before the age of 16 years were included. Clinical follow-ups involved bleeding on

probing, plaque index and peri-implant probing value. The peri-implant bone level was analyzed on panoramic radiographs at time of implant treatment and at follow-up. Characteristics of the dental implants and patients (gender, smoking status, position of the missing teeth and age at the time of implant placement) were gathered. The implant positions during maturation was evaluated measuring the center of the implant-abutment interface to a reference line.

Results: This study involved 18 patients (9 m/9 f) having 71 dental implants. 3 were smokers. Youngest patient was 6 yrs old. Number of missing teeth ranged from 10-26. 4 pts received overdentures and the rest, crowns. The tooth predominantly missing was lower left second premolar. Implants used were Nobel Biocare and Dentsply Friadent.

  • Mean age at the time of dental implant treatment was 12.5 years.

  • BOP was negative on 44% of the implants and positive in 32%. Mean PD was 3.6 mm.

  • The peri-implant bone level correlated significantly negative with the age at time of implant placement.

  • There were no SSD between bone loss and implant diameter, surface, length, PI, the region, and smoking habits.

  • Dental implant treatment in adolescents resulted in a survival rate of 89% (63/71) with a mean loading time of 11 years.

  • Thesuccess rate of the dental implants (criteria: peri-implant probing value ≤5 mm, bleeding on probing (BoP) negative, bone loss <0.2 mm) was evaluated on 54 dental implants and calculated as 17% (9/54, 5 patients).

  • 54% of the implant crowns (nine of 18 patients, 38 of 71 crowns) had to be renewed after a period of 7.8 years

Conclusion: The results demonstrate long-term survival of DIs in adolescents. However, more long-term studies are needed to further enhance dental implant treatment in maturing individuals with extensive oligodontia.

Topic:Age

Author:Heij DG, Opdebeeck H, van Steenberghe D, Quirynen M.

Title: Age as compromising factor for implant insertion.

Source:Periodontol 2000 2003; 33:172-184

Type: Review

Rating: Good

Keywords:Dental implants; age; maxilla growth/development; mandible growth/development

Purpose:The purpose of this review was to present the age considerations that need to be taken into account during the planning of dental implants.

Discussion:

  • Because of osseointegration, which resembles ankylosis, implants do not follow the spontaneous and continuous eruption of the natural dentition. Such implants may even disturb a normal development of the jawbones.

  • Installation of an implant should generally be postponed on average until after puberty or after the so-called growth spurt of the child.

  • Implants do not follow the formation and development of the alveolar process. At some distance from the implants, the tissues developed normally, but in the immediate vicinity of the implants, further development was slowed down. This can lead to unesthetic and non-functional situations (loss of occlusal contact) together with periodontal complications.

Recommendations by Area

  • Anterior Maxilla

    • Most risky site for early implant placement due to the amount, the direction, and the unpredictability of growth in this area

    • Premature implant placement can necessitate a repeated lengthening of the transgingival or transmucosal part of the implants

    • On a long-term basis, early placement can even adversely affect adjacent natural teeth.

    • Best strategy is to delay implant insertion until after skeletal growth has completed.

  • Posterior Maxilla

    • Large variations exist in the amount and direction of both sagittal and vertical growth, and the unpredictability of the growth pattern.

    • Since the vertical growth occurs by apposition on the alveolar aspect and resorption on the nasal or maxillary sinus area, an early inserted implant can become submerged occlusally and exposed apically.

    • Recommend delaying an implant placement until after cessation of growth.

  • Anterior Mandible

    • Transverse and sagittal growth are completed relatively early in this area.

    • Area seems to hold the greatest potential for early use of an implant supported prosthesis

    • Should avoid use of early implants in combination with natural teeth in that area.

  • Posterior Mandible

    • As the mandible undergoes rotational growth, significant changes occur in both the alveolus and the mandibular border, largely influence by the facial growth type.

    • Progressive Infraocclusion of the implant and harm to adjacent teeth preclude the early placement of dental implants in this area.

Topic:Implant patient age

Authors: Meijer HJ, Batenburg RH, Raghoebar GM

Title:Influence of patient age on the success rate of dental implants supporting an overdenture in an edentulous mandible: a 3-year prospective study

Source:Int J Oral Maxillofac Implants. 2001 Jul-Aug;16(4):522-6.

Type:Prospective study

Rating: Good

Keywords: Aging, dental implants, geriatric dentistry

Purpose: To compare selected clinical parameters in older and younger edentulous patients with an implant supported mandibular overdenture during a 3-year evaluation period.

Methods:Inclusion criteria included an edentulous period of at least 2 years and severe resorption of the mandibular ridge. All patients were treated with implants in the right and left canine region of the lower mandible. Implants were restored after 3 months with an overdenture supported by a round bar and clip attachment. The patients were divided into 2 groups based on age: the “younger” patient group (50 and below and the “older” age group (60 and above). Bone height and quality was measured at baseline when denture was placed, at 12 months after placement, and 36 months after placement with standardized intraoral radiographs and lateral cephalometric radiographs. Implant loss, plaque/calculus, inflammation, PD, and BOP were recorded.

Results: One implant was lost in the patient of the older group. The implant appeared to be mobile 3 months after placement. Another implant was successfully placed after 6 months. The only significant difference in clinical parameters noted in between groups was seen in plaque levels, with higher plaque levels observed in the older group.

Discussion: Clinical performance of implant-supported overdentures in the mandible was equally successful in younger and older patients. Increased plaque levels in older patients could be due to increased difficulty in manipulation of devices required to clean I-bars and abutments, however age should not be used as a reason to exclude patients from implant treatment.

Topic:Implant VI – Treatment Planning           implant failure rates and associated risk factors
Authors: Moy PK et al
Title: Dental implant failure rates and associated risk factors.

Source: Int J Oral Maxillofac Implants. 2005 Jul-Aug;20(4):569-77

Type:Retrospective Cohort

Rating: Very Good

Keywords: dental implants, implant failure, medical risk factors, osseointegration

Purpose: To test the hypothesis that coexisting conditions (such as smoking, diabetes, and radiation therapy) lead to increased rates of implant failure, a retrospective analysis of dental implants placed in a consistent manner by a single surgeon was carried out.

Method: a cohort study of consecutive series of patients who received dental implants by the same surgeon over a 21-year period. Medical history and risk factors including, age, gender, location of implant, smoking history and coexisting medical conditions such as diabetes, HP, coronary artery disease, asthma, steroids, chemotherapy and radiation and post-menopausal hormone replacement therapy were extracted from the records.

All implants were placed in a consistent protocol by the same surgeon. Follow up was up to 20 years by the surgeon or a hygienist, most implants were machined type, and failure was recorded when an implant was removed due to mobility, pain, infection, paresthesia or anesthesia and radiographic bone loss greater than 50%

Results:A total of 4,680 implants were placed in 1,140 patients between 1982 and 2003. Patients’ age ranged from 12 to 94 years and females were 59.4% of the study sample. 68% of patients had 1 or more coexisting condition and 6% had 3 or more conditions. 74% of patients had 1 to 5 implants, 26% had 6 or more implants and 1 patient had 24 implants. 85.1% of patients had successful implants; however, 14.9% experienced at least 1 implant failure.

Implants in the maxilla had twice the failure rate of those placed in the mandible. Failure rate in the maxilla is 8.16%, and failure rate in the mandible was 4.93%.

Diabetes, smoking, and head and neck radiation were significant predictors of implant failures. More implants failed in diabetics and those with previous head and neck radiation than in smokers. In smokers, most failures ocured within the first year. Diabetics had failures that continued over the following 10 years and radiation patients experienced most failures within the first 2 years but had fewer failures after 5 or 10 years.

Conclusion:some medical risk factors such as asthma, hypertension and chronic steroid therapy are not correlated with significant increase of dental implant failure. Only smoking, diabetes, head and neck radiation and postmenopausal hormone replacement therapy were associated with significant increase in implant failure. The study did not report any contraindications.

Topic: Biological Principles                   patient age on single implant submersion

Authors:Scwartz-Arad D, Bichacho N

Title:Effect of age on single implant submersion rate in the central maxillary incisor region: A long-term retrospective study.

Source:Clinical Implant Dentistry 2013; 1-6.

Type:Retrospective Study

Rating:Good

Keywords:age, dental implants, long term, and submersion rate

Background:It is contraindicated to place dental implants before growth and development are completed as they are at a risk of submersion due to growth arrest, creating a potential aesthetic problem.

Purpose:The present study evaluated the effect of age on mean submersion rate of single dental implant in the central maxillary incisor area placed after growth has ceased, as compared with the adjacent incisor natural tooth.

Materials and methods A retrospective study was conducted on 35 patients (mean age 29.3±9.9 years, 21 females) who received a single dental implant replacing a missing maxillary central incisor from 1992 to 2008 with a follow-up of at least 3 years. Clinical photos from last follow-up were digitally analyzed to measure the vertical change between the incisal edge of the implant supported crown and the adjacent natural central incisor.

Results:In the younger age group (30 years), the submersion rate was more than three times higher than in the older age group (>30 years), yielding submersion rates of 1.02 and 0.27% per year, respectively. Accordingly, significantly higher proportion of soft tissue complications was also observed in the younger age group as compared with the older one.

Conclusion:

Whereas implant submersion continues throughout adult life, its rate varies with age. It is evident that this phenomenon is much more conspicuous during the second and third decades of life as compared with the fourth and fifth.

Discussion:

If implants are placed before cessation of facial growth, they will submerge relative to the adjacent erupting teeth. Facial growth of the child or adolescent, as well as the continuous eruption of the adjacent anterior teeth, creates significant risk of a less favorable esthetic and/or functional outcome.

Topic: Treatment planning       Implants in periodontally compromised patients

Authors:Wennstrom & Lang

Title:Treatment planning for Implant Therapy in Periodontally Compromised Patient

Source:

Type:

Rating:Good

Keywords:treatment planning, prognosis, compromised patient

Developments in implant treatment options influence our decisions regarding the preservation of teeth with varying degrees of periodontal destruction

PROGNOSIS OF IMPLANT THERAPY IN PERIO COMPROMISED PATIENTS

Global data on implant survival indicate low incidence of implant loss

Question remains: do implants have better long-term prognosis than teeth?

Data from 5 & 10 year studies on perio patients with regular supportive care that incidence of tooth loss =2-5%; implants NOT BETTER THAN TEETH LONG-TERM in these studies.

Perio patients may have increased susceptibility to bone loss around implants.

STRATEGIES IN TREATMENT PLANNING

Comprehensive clinical and Radiographic exams are the basis for planning

Elimination of periodontal lesions prior to implant placement and establishment of high standard of infection control are decisive factors for successful implant therapy; if this is coupled with regular recall – the long term should be same as for patients without prior periodontal disease

POSTERIOR SEGMENTS-

Usually the most severely affected by PD and tooth loss

Tooth Vs. Implant

Is the tooth a critical tooth, or supporting C&B work (ie what is the functional value of the tooth?)

Could the tooth be saved via Sx or nonsurgical means? GTR?

What are the patient’s esthetic and functional demands?

If the tooth is extracted will sufficient bone exist to install an implant? Will sinus or more extensive grafting procedures be necessary to provide sufficient bone?

AGGRESSIVE PERIODONTITIS

Patients often respond to regenerative therapy. Wide, angular Defects are often present on teeth adjacent ones lost early and can often be saved with such regenerative techniques.

instead of dooming these teeth and initiating more complex implant supported restorations, GTR can often be done then limiting the number and complexity of implants otherwise required.

Success is ultimately attributable to high-quality infection control

FURCATION PROBLEMS

If root section is performed, do the future roots have enough interradicular periodontal support after endodontics to support a restoration?

Single-tooth in Esthetic Zone

Can the tooth be saved? Will inevitable consequences of therapy required to save tooth be acceptable (recession, black triangles)?

Topic:Periodontitis vs implant survival

AuthorsKaroussis IK, Kotsovilis S, Fourmousis I

Title: A comprehensive and critical review of dental implant prognosis in periodontally compromised partially edentulous patients.

Source: Clin Oral Implants Res. 2007 Dec;18(6):669-79

Type: Clinical study

Rating: Poor

Objectives: To examine the short-term (<5 years) and long-term ( >5 years) prognosis of osseointegrated implants placed in periodontally compromised partially edentulous patients.


Material and methods: Using the National Library Of Medicine and Cochrane Oral Health Group databases, a literature search for articles published up to and including August 2006 was performed. Out of 2987 potentially abstracts/ 15 prospective studies were selected, including 7 short-term and 8 long-term studies. Because of considerable discrepancies among these studies, meta-analysis was not performed.

Results:

  • Short-term survival rates in pt with history of chronic periodontitis: 90-100%

  • Long-term survival rate in pts with history of chronic periodontitis up to 97.32%

  • Two long term studies reported survival rates <90%, both of them included hollow implants many of which had a short length

  • 95% short-term and 88.8% 5-year survival rates in patients treated for aggressive periodontitis

  • In conclusion, the long-term survival rates of implants placed in partially edentulous patients with a history of chronic periodontitis are comparable to the mean implant survival rates reported for the general population

Conclusion:

    • Short-term survival rates comparable to periodontally healthy individuals, stability of PPD, CAL and peri-implant marginal bone loss

    • Long-term survival rates may exceed 90%

    • PDs and the proportion of deep pockets tend to increase throughout a long-term period

    • Effect on long-term marginal bone loss around implants is not yet clarified

    • Although surviving, implants in patients with history of periodontitis may demonstrate higher incidence of peri-implantitis

    • Insufficient data for patients with aggressive periodontitis at that time

Critics: Absence of universally accepted definition for “periodontally compromised” patients and criteria for implant success. According to these studies, the ‘periodontally compromised’ patients have a history of periodontitis (chronic or aggressive), but no active disease at the time of implant placement. Certain studies included a relatively limited number of patients. Several studies included smokers. Implant ‘success’ was defined in some cases only. In certain cases, sinus membrane elevation.

Topic: Periodontitis history

Authors:Karroussis, I

Title: A comprehensive and critical review of dental implant prognosis in peridontally compromised partially edentulous patients.

Source: Clin Oral Impl. Res 18, 2007; 669-679

Type: Systematic review

Rating: Good

Keywords: prognosis, periodontally compro

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Implant 5 – Treatment Planning I

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Medical History: medical conditions + drugs that may affect implant and surgical outcome; Risk factors

  1. Misch and Resnik. Medical Evaluation of the Dental Implant Patient (CH 20). pp 406-420. Contemporary Implant Dentistry, Misch, C.E., 3rd Edition, 2008, Mosby Year Book.

  2. Rose L and Mealey B. Implant complications associated with systemic disorders and medications. (CH 2) pp 9-45.

  3. Sugerman, P., Barber, M.: Patient selection for endossous dental implants; Oral and systemic considerations. Int J Oral Maxillofac Implants. 2002 Mar-Apr; 17(2):191-201

  4. Ong, C et al: Systematic Review of Implant Outcomes in Treated Periodontitis Subjects. J Clin Periodontol 2008; 35:438

  5. RasperiniG, Siciliano VI, et al. Crestal bone changes at teeth and implants in periodontally healthy and periodontally compromised patients. A 10-year comparative case-series study. J Periodontol. 2013 Nov 11. [Epub ahead of print]

  6. KlokkevoldP, Han T: How do smoking, diabetes and periodontits affect outcomes of implant treatment? Int J Oral Maxillofac Implants. 2007; 22 (suppl)173-202

  7. Dowel, S et al: Implant success in people with type 2 diabetes mellitus with varying glycemic control. A pilot study. JADA: 138:2007:355-361

  8. StrietzelFP, Reichart PA, et al. Smoking interferes with the prognosis of dental implant treatment: a systematic review and meta-analysis. J Clin Periodontol. 2007 Jun;34(6):523-44. Review.

  9. BainCA Implant installation in the smoking patient. Periodontol 2000. 2003;33:185-93. Review.

  10. Fugazzotto, P et al: Implant Placement with or without Simultaneous Tooth Extraction in Patients Taking Oral Bisphosphonates: Postoperative Healing, Early Follow up and Incidence of Complications in Two Private Practices. J Periodontol 2007; 78:1664-1669

  11. Colella, Cannavale, Pentenero, Gandolfo: Oral implants in radiated patients: A systematic review. Int J Orla Maxillofac Implants 2007; 22(4):616-623

  12. Holahan, C et al: Effect of osteoporotic status on the survival of titanium dental implants. Int J Oral Maxillofac Implants. 2008:Sep-Oct; 23(5)905-10

  13. ClaudyMP, Miguens SA Jr, et al Time Interval after Radiotherapy and Dental Implant Failure: Systematic Review of Observational Studies and Meta-Analysis. Clin Implant Dent Relat Res. 2013 Jun 7. [Epub ahead of print]

  14. SharafB, Dodson TB. Does the use of prophylactic antibiotics decrease implant failure? Oral Maxillofac Surg Clin North Am. 2011 Nov;23(4):547-50

  15. AhmadN, Saad N. Effects of antibiotics on dental implants: a review. J Clin Med Res. 2012 Feb;4(1):1-6.

  16. EspositoM, Grusovin MG, Worthington HV. Interventions for replacing missing teeth: antibiotics at dental implant placement to prevent complications. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2013 Jul 31;7:CD004152.

  17. Ata-AliJ, Ata-Ali F, Ata-Ali F. Do antibiotics decrease implant failure and postoperative infections? A systematic review and meta-analysis. Int J Oral Maxillofac Surg. 2013 Jun 25. pii: S0901-5027(13)00258-0. doi: 10.1016/j.ijom.2013.05.019. [Epub ahead of print]

  18. Alissa R, Sakka S, Oliver R, et al. Influence of ibuprofen on bone healing around dental implants: a randomised double-blind placebo-controlled clinical study. Eur J Oral Implantol. 2009 Autumn;2(3):185-99.


Topic:Patient selection

Author:Sugerman, P., Barber, M

Title:Patient selection for endossous dental implants; Oral and systemic considerations.

Source:J Oral Maxillofac Implants. 2002 Mar-Apr; 17(2):191-201

Type:Discussion

Rating: Good

Keywords:patient selection, endossous dental implant, oral, systemic consideration

Purpose:The aims of this article were to define “reasonable health” for dental implant treatment and to provide a systematic approach to the selection of dental implant patients.

Discussion:

TITANIUM TOXICOLOGY The survival or success of endosseous dental implants may be influenced by a number of local and systemic conditions. Some of these conditions affect the process of osseointegration directly. The following are noted in particular.

  • PHYSICAL STATUS

    • The American Society for Anesthesiology (ASA) has defined a 6-point scale of physical status

  • AGE

    • Younger patients may show greater crestal bone resorption around dental implants.It is therefore recommended that implant placement be delayed until growth and development have ceased or are minimal

    • However, implant failure does not correlate with age or sex. Increasing age has no effect on osseointegration or the rate of crestal bone resorption around dental implants.

  • PATIENT EXPECTATION

    • Although dental implants can enhance esthetics, phonetics, and bite force, it is important to identify unrealistic expectationsthat patients may have about implants and implant- retained prostheses.

  • HYPOHIDROTIC ECTODERMAL DYSPLASIA is characterized by hypodontia, hypotrichosis, and hypohidrosis. Dental implants have been used successfully in patients with severe hypodontia associated with ectodermal dysplasia.In a recent prospective study, implant placement and prosthetic rehabilitation in young children with ectodermal dysplasia did not restrict transverse or sagittal growth. However, vertical alveolar growth resulted in the occasional submergence of endosseous implants, necessitating revision and the placement of longer abutments.

  • SMOKING:Many studies have shown that smoking interferes with osseointegrationand accelerates bone resorption around dental implants

  • OSTEOPOROSIS:osteoporosis appears not to influence implant survival.Moreover,endosseous dental implants may actually stimulate mandibular bone formation in a load-dependent manner.

  • DIABETES MELLITUS: endosseous dental implants are usually successful in patients with diabetes, although uncontrolled diabetes contraindicates dental implant placement. Consideration should be given to antibiotic prophylaxis for surgical procedures in diabetic patients.

  • SCLERODERMA:little is known about dental implants in patients with scleroderma.Endosseous dental implants may improve prosthesis function and comfort in scleroderma patients, although access for implant surgery and for oral hygiene may be compromised.

  • SJÖGREN SYNDROME: Implant-supported prostheses were shown to considerably increase prosthetic comfort and function in patients with Sjögren syndrome,preferable to soft tissue-supported prostheses.

  • MULTIPLE MYELOMA: Implant success has been reported in a patient with multiple myeloma.Unmanaged malignant disease in general must be considered a contraindication for the placement of endosseous dental implants.

  • PARKINSON’S DISEASE: Implant- supported prostheses should be considered in patients with Parkinson’s diseaseand other diseases affecting orofacial motor function.

  • BONE MARROW TRANSPLANTATION: Implant placement should be delayeduntil cytotoxic chemotherapy has ended and the mar- row graft has taken. Bone marrow transplant patients may develop oral graft-versus-host disease that is clinically similar to oral lichen planus

  • HIV: endosseous dental implants have been placed successfully in HIV-positive patients

  • SYSTEMIC DRUGS: Consultation with the patient’s physicianprior to dental implant placement is desirable for patients on anticoagulants or long-term systemic corticosteroids.

  • CHRONICALLY INFECTED IMPLANT SITES: Periodontitis and periapical lesions should be diagnosed and treated prior to dental implant placement.

  • ORAL LICHEN PLANUS Endosseous dental implants may be used in patients with nonerosive forms of OLP, although patients should be warned of possible lesion exacerbation related to surgery and possible implant failure if gingival lesions become erosive

  • HEAD AND NECK RADIOTHERAPY: Implant placement following head and neck radiotherapy is associated with a significant risk of osteoradionecrosis, especially with irradiation above 50 Gy. Recommended a 6- to 12-month recovery period after irradiation prior to dental implant placement

Presurgical hyperbaric oxygen may reduce the dental implant failure rate in irradiated jawbone from 60% to 5%

  • TARDIVE DYSKINESIAS Tardive dyskinesia may complicate dental implant therapy.Alternatives to endosseous dental implants should be considered for patients with neurologic disorders including orofacial dyskinesia, trigeminal neuralgia, or orofacial dysesthesia.

Topic: Implants in patients with periodontitis

Authors: Ong, C et al:

Tittle:Systematic Review of Implant Outcomes in Treated Periodontitis Subjects.

Source: J Clin Periodontol 2008; 35:438

Type: Systematic Review

Rating: Good

Keywords:periimplantitis, failure

Purpose:To determine implant outcomes in partially dentate patients who have been treated for periodontitis compared with periodontally healthy patients.

Methods:

All longitudinal studies (until March 2006) of endosseous dental implants of at least 6 months of loading were searched. Studies presented with one or more of the outcome measures (implant survival, success, bone-level change, peri-implantitis) were included. Screening, data abstraction and quality assessment were conducted independently and in duplicate.

Results:

From 4448 citations, 546 full-text papers were screened and nine studies were included. Overall, the non-periodontitis patients demonstrated better outcomes than treated periodontitis patients. However, the strength of evidence showed that the studies included were at a medium to high risk of bias, with lack of appropriate reporting and analysis of outcomes plus lack of accounting for confounders, especially smoking. Furthermore, the studies showed variability in the definitions of treated and non-periodontitis, outcome criteria and quality of supportive periodontal therapy. Meta-analysis could not be performed due to heterogeneity of the chief study characteristics.

Conclusion:

There is some evidence that patients treated for periodontitis may experience more implant loss and complications around implantsthan non-periodontitis patients. Evidence is stronger for implant survival than implant success; methodological issues limit the potential to draw robust conclusions.

Topic:crestal bone height change

Authors:Rasperini G, Siciliano VI

Title:Crestal bone changes at teeth and implants in periodontally healthy and periodontally compromised patients. A 10-year comparative case-series study.

Source:J Periodontol. 2013 Nov 11.

Type:Comparative case-series

Rating:Good

Keywords:alveolar bone loss, peri-implantitis, periodontitis, smoking

Purpose:To compare the 10 year radiographic crestal bone changes around teeth and implants in periodontally compromised and periodontally healthy patients.

Methods:120 patients (60 with prev hx of perio, 60 healthy) were followed for 10 years post loading for radiographic crestal bone height of dental implants and adjacent teeth. 10 patients were smokers. Digital films were calibrated. Radiographic crestal bone change was calculated by subtracting the creatl BL at baseline from the crestal BL at the 10 year follow up.

Results:After 10 years, implant survival was 80-95% and 100% for teeth. In all categories evaluated, natural teeth were significantly more stable radiographically compared to implants. Adjacent teeth did not seem to be influenced by the presence or absence of bone loss ≥3mm at adjacent implants.

Conclusion:Long-term results show that natural teeth have greater survival and less marginal bone loss compared to dental implants. This was still true when looking at teeth with reduced periodontal attachment (treated and maintained). The decision to extract teeth in favor of dental implants should be carefully considered in partially edentulous patients.

Topic:Risk factors for implants

Authors: Klokkevold P, Han T

Title:How do smoking, diabetes and periodontits affect outcomes of implant treatment?

Source:Int J Oral Maxillofac Implants. 2007; 22 (suppl)173-202

Type:Review

Rating: Good

Keywords:dental implants, dental implant survival, diabetes, periodontitis, smoking, tobacco

Purpose: To evaluate the available literature to assess whether smoking, diabetes, and periodontitis have an adverse effect on the outcomes of implants placed in patients with these conditions.

Method: The dental literature was searched using the MEDLINE, Cochrane Collaboration, and EMBASE databases. Using specific inclusion and exclusion criteria, 2 reviewers evaluated titles, abstracts, and full articles to identify articles relevant to this review. All searches were conducted for articles published through May 2005. Data from included articles for each of the risk factor groups, smoking, diabetes, and periodontitis, were abstracted and analyzed.

Results: A detailed search of the literature and evaluation of relevant articles identified 35 articles for inclusion in this systematic review. Nineteen articles were identified for smoking, 4 articles were identified for diabetes, and 13 articles were identified for periodontitis. One article met the criteria for both smoking and periodontitis. Implant survival and success rates were reported for smokers versus nonsmokers; diabetic patients versus nondiabetic patients; and patients with a history of treated periodontitis versus patients with no history of periodontitis. The findings revealed statistically significant differences in survival and success rates for smokers (better for nonsmokers), with greater differences observed when the data were analyzed according to bone quality (less for loose trabecular bone). No difference in implant survival rate was found between patients with and without diabetes. Likewise, no difference in implant survival rates was found between patients with a history of treated periodontitis compared to patients with no history of periodontitis.

Conclusion: The results of this systematic review of the literature demonstrated that smoking has an adverse effect on implant survival and success. The effect of smoking on implant survival appeared to be more pronounced in areas of loose trabecular bone. Type 2 diabetes may have an adverse effect on implant survival rates, but the limited number of studies included in this review do not permit a definitive conclusion. A history of treated periodontitis does not appear to adversely affect implant survival rates but it may have a negative influence on implant success rates, particularly over longer periods.

Topic:Diabetes

Author:Dowel, S et al

Title:Implant success in people with type 2 diabetes mellitus with varying glycemic control. A pilot study.

Source:JADA: 138:2007:355-361

Type:Cohort study

Rating:Good

Keywords:Diabetes, dental implants, implant success

Purpose:The authors conducted a prospective cohort study to explore the relationship between implant success and glycemic control in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus.

Methods:The authors used a two-phased enrollment, stratified by glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) levels, to evaluate 50 implants in 35 subjects. The authors assessed nonsubmerged, nonrestored implants after placement, during healing and at abutment placement (35 newton centimeters) for restoration after four months. Outcomes assessed included implant success or failure, clinical complications and adverse events.

Results:The HbA1c levels of the subjects ranged from 4.5 to 13.8 percent. All 50 implants were integrated clinically. The authors identified three minor complications in three patients having HbA1c levels ranging from 7.4 to 8.3 percent. None of these complications affected the clinical management of the cases, and the authors did not identify any adverse events.

Conclusion:There was no evidence of diminished clinical success or significant early healing complications associated with implant therapy based on the glycemic control levels of subjects with type 2 diabetes mellitus. These findings support the continued investigation of the effects of glycemic control on implant therapy toward the development of therapeutic guidelines that will optimize implant therapy in patients with diabetes.

Topic:smoking and implant

Authors:Strietzel FP, Reichart PA, et al.

Title: Smoking interferes with the prognosis of dental implant treatment: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

Source:J Clin Periodontol. 2007 Jun;34(6):523-44. Review.

Type: Retrospective Study

Rating: Good

Keywords:dental implants; meta-analysis;odds ratio; smoking; success rate; survival rate

P: To investigate if smoking interferes with the prognosis of implants with and without accompanying augmentation procedures compared with non-smokers.

M&M:A systematic electronic and handsearch (1989 and 2005; English and German language; search terms “dental or oral implants and smoking”; “dental or oral implants and tobacco”) was performed to identify publications providing numbers of failed implants, related to the numbers of smokers and non-smokers for meta-analysis. Publications providing statistically examined data of implant failures or biologic complications among smokers compared with non-smokers were included for systematic review.

R: Of 139 publications identified, 29 were considered for meta-analysis and 35 for systematic review. Meta-analysis revealed a significantly enhanced risk for implant failure among smokers [implant-related odds ratio (OR) 2.25, confidence interval (CI(95%)) 1.96-2.59; patient-related OR 2.64; CI(95%) 1.70-4.09] compared with non-smokers, and for smokers receiving implants with accompanying augmentation procedures (OR 3.61; CI(95%) 2.26-5.77, implant related). The systematic review indicated significantly enhanced risks of biologic complications among smokers. Five studies revealed no significant impact of smoking on prognosis of implants with particle-blasted, acid-etched or anodic oxidized surfaces.

C:Smoking is a significant risk factor for dental implant therapy and augmentation procedures accompanying implantations.

Topic:smoking and implant

Authors: Bain CA

Title:Implant installation in the smoking patient.

Source:Periodontol 2000. 2003;33:185-93.

Type:Review.

Rating: good

Keywords:implant, failure, smoking,

Purpose:to review the association between smoking and implant failure; potential mechanisms, and benefits of smoking cessation.

Discussion:

  • Effects of smoking on general health:smoking has been shown to affect health in many ways such as; cancers especially lung cancer, chronic lung disease, myocardial infarctions, strokes and ischemic heart disease. Research show that 50% of smokers die from a smoking related disease, and life expectancy of smokers is reduced by 7.5 years. Smoking also has been shown to have an adverse effect on bone density.

  • Effects of smoking on wound healing: smoking is a complicating factor in post-surgical wound healing. Smokers show less reduction in PD after SRP, poorer healing after mucogingival surgeries, less favorable healing following OFD, greater loss of bone height, reduction in post-ext socket fill and more painful ext socket. Smoking compromises healing of duodenal ulcers. Also, in a study about healing after orthopedic surgery, it was shown than there are more delayed union or non-unions in smokers.

  • Influence of smoking on the actions of polymorphonuclear leukocyte, macrophages, circulation and blood flow:Several studies have shown that smoking causes reduced phagocytosis, delayed margination and diapedesis as well as compromised aggregation and adhesion of leukocytes to the endothelium in venules and arteries. Peripheral endothelial dysfunction, vessel wall injury and capillary loss is common in smokers, also reactive hyperemia and sequestration of blood cells in the microcirculation. Coronary flow reserve is also decreases after smoking high-nicotine cigarettes.

  • Smoking and implant failure:

    • Smoking and particularly heavy smoking increases the failure rates for machined titanium implants, likely due to a compromise of the blood supply in bone during early healing

    • This increased failure rate clusters largely in the maxilla, with much smaller differences between smokers and non-smokers for implant in the mandible.

    • Smoking is associated with a particularly high failure rate for implants placed into grafted maxillary sinuses.Some operators may consider this to be too great a risk to take, if the patient is unable or unwilling to stop smoking.

  • What happens if the potential implant patient stops smoking:Smoking cessation has been demonstrated to improve success rates in machined implant patients. In fact, implant placement may well be an effective motivator in assisting a smoker with cessation.

  • Bone density, smoking and implant success: There appears to be a relationship between heavy smoking and reduced bone density. This is seen in various areas of medicine, as well as in implant surgery and might explain high failure rates in Type 4 bone

  • Do different materials and surfaces make a difference:There is early evidence that rough surface implants, prepared with a double acid etched technique, have a high success rate in smokers. With success rates around 10% better overall (98.7% vs. 88.7%) and 15% better in the maxilla (97.3% vs. 82.1%) than our original results with machined Branemark implants in smokers, these are at present considered to be the implant of choice in smokers who cannot or will not stop smoking for implant placement.

Topic:Oral Bisphosphonates

Author: Fugazzotto P

Title:Implant Placement with or without Simultaneous Tooth Extraction in Patients Taking Oral Bisphosphonates: Postoperative Healing, Early Follow up and Incidence of Complications in Two Private Practices

Source:J Periodontol 2007; 78:1664-1669

Type:Retrospective study

Rating: Good

Keywords:Bisphosphonates; dental implants; osteonecrosis

Purpose:The purpose of this article was to document the results of treatment of patients with a history of oral bisphosphonate therapy in two private periodontal practices.

Methods:61 female patients were treated in two private offices. All patients were receiving oral bisphosphonate therapy in the form of alendronate or risedronate, 35 or 70 mg/week. All these participants were treated with implant placement and restoration or tooth extraction, immediate placement, and restoration. These patients were then followed for 12 to 24 months after implant placement. The incidence of hard and soft tissue complications, including the development of osteonecrosis were noted.

Results:There were no reported cases of osteonecrosis immediately postoperatively during the follow-up period in any of the 61 patients. One patient demonstrated a small tissue dehiscence at the 1-week postoperative exam. No other complications occurred. All implants were functioning successfully by the Albrektsson criteria 12 to 24 months post-insertion.

Discussion: While the concern with BON is very much real with IV bisphosphonate. A history of oral bisphosphonate use for a mean period of 3.3 years was not found to be a contributing factor to the development of osteonecrosis following implant placement. Due to the size of the patient population, larger controlled studies and retrospective studies are needed.

Topic:Radiation

Authors: Colella, Cannavale, Pentenero, Gandolfo:

Title:Oral implants in radiated patients: A systematic review

Source:Int J Orla Maxillofac Implants 2007; 22(4):616-623

Type:Systematic review

Rating: Good

Keywords: Dental implants, oral cancer, radiation therapy

Purpose:To evaluate and compare the effects of pre- and post-implant radiation therapy. Incidence of implant failure was linked to multiple variables and assessed.

Methods:A thorough review of the relevant literature was performed. Studies were original studies based in humans from 1990- 2006. The man outcome considered was implant failure, defined as implant mobility, implant removal necessitated by progressive marginal bone loss or infection (biologic failure). Restorative status was not considered a determinate of success (sleeping implants were considered a positive outcome). Overall implant failure rate was compared for pre-implantation radiation therapy vs. post-implantation. Four variables were considered: implant location (maxilla vs. mandible), dose of radiation, delay from radiation to implant placement, and timing of implant failure.

Results:18 articles were considered eligible for inclusion in the review.Implant failure in post-implantation radiation therapy: 6 studies overall reported 124 implants with 4 failures (3.2%). Implant failure in pre-implantation radiation therapy: An overall failure rate of 5.4% was reported, which was not significantly different from post-implantation. 22/46 failures reported the cause of failure, with 9 due to lack of osseointegration, 12 due to marginal bone loss, and 1 due to biting trauma. Implant failure in the maxilla was 17.5% and 4.4% in the mandible, a difference that was significant. Vascularized free flaps were associated with the lowest rate of implant failure. Radiation dose: Radiation doses lower than 45 Gy were associated with the lowest rate of implant failure, with 5% being reported at higher doses. Delay of radiation treatment to implant placement: All implant failures occurred within 36 months after treatment. Timing of implant failure: No failures occurred within one month, 3.1% failed within the first month and 0.8% failed after 1 year.

Discussion:Based on this study, the timing of implant placement (pre- or post-therapy)is not linked to a significant difference in implant failure rate, however significantly better outcomes were noted in the mandible.

Topic:osteoporosis
Authors:Holahan, C et al
Title:Effect of osteoporotic status on the survival of titanium dental implants.

Source: Int J Oral Maxillofac Implants. 2008:Sep-Oct; 23(5)905-10

Type:

Rating: Good

Keywords: dental implants, implant survival, osteoporosis

Purpose:Primary Objective is to perform a retrospective chart review to determine the effect of osteoporotic status on survival of dental implants in postmenopausal women. Secondary Objectives included assessing the effects of smoking status, age, and arch location on implant survival as a function of osteoporotic status.

Method: a retrospective chart review was completed on all women who were 50 years of age or older at the time of dental implant placement at the Mayo Clinic between Oct 1, 1983 and Dec 31, 2004. The medical and dental charts were evaluated to collect the following:

  1. BMD T-score within 3 years of implant placement

  2. Osteoporotic diagnosis based on BMD T-score

  3. Arch location of the implants

  4. Smoking status at time of implant placement

  5. Any implant failures (implant removal due to any reason other than infection or manufacturing defects)

The review resulted in 192 patients (646 implants). Implant survival was estimated using the Kaplan-Meier method. Follow up duration was calculated from date of implant placement to date of failure or last follow up.

Results:

  • The Kaplan-Meier t- and 10-year survival rates for the 64 implants in 192 patients were 93.8% and 92.5% respectively. The mean follow up was 5.4 years (range 11 days to 20.4 years). Mean age of women studied was 63.4 years (range 50.3 to 84.9 years)

  • Osteoporotic diagnosis of patients based on BMD T-score was: 49% diagnosed as non-OP, 29.7% had osteopenia and 21.4% had osteoporosis. 37 implant failures were found: 10 implant failures in the osteoporosis group, 10 implant failures in the osteopenia group and the other 17 failures occurred in patients with non-OP diagnosis.

  • No significant association between arch location and implant failure was identified.

  • 12.5% of patients were smoking at the time of implant placement. Smoking had a significant effect on implant failure. Implants in smokers were 2.6 times more likely to fail (5- and 10- year implant survival rate for smokers was 87.3%). Non-smokers had 94.6% and 93.1% survival rates.

Conclusion:

  • Dental implant survival rates in this group of patients were encouraging with a 10-year survival rate of 92.5%.

  • Implants placed in smokers were 2.6 times more likely to fail than those placed in nonsmokers. The difference between those were most evident in the first year after implant placement.

  • A diagnosis of osteoporosis or osteopenia is not a contraindication to dental implant therapy.

Topic: Biological Principles

Authors:Claudy et al

Title:Time interval after radiotherapy and dental implant failure: systematic review of observational studies and meta-analysis

Source:Clinical implant dentistry 2013;1-10

Type:Systematic Review

Rating:Good

Keywords:dental implants, meta-analysis, osseointegration, osteoradionecrosis, radiotherapy

Purpose: To compare the risk of failure of dental implants placed within 6 and 12 months after the end of radiotherapy versus the risk of those implants placed after 12 months from the end of radiotherapy.

Materials and method

Four electronic databases were searched for articles published until February 2013 without language restriction: Lilacs, Medline, Scopus and the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials. Two reviewers independently assessed the eligibility criteria and extracted data. Meta-analysis was performed.

Results:Overall 3,749 observational studies were identified. After the screening of titles and abstracts, 236 publications were selected, and finally 10 articles were included in the analysis. The Relative Risk of failure (1.34) was higher in individuals who had dental implants installed between 6 and 12 months after receiving radiotherapy.

Discussion:The main finding was that placement of dental implants between 6 and 12 months postradiotherapy was associated with 34% higher risk of failure. This is statistically significant and clinically relevant. Literature suggests that patients treated with radiation doses exceeding 50 Gray Units (Gy) are at increased risk of failure of osseointegration because of the loss of ability to repair and neovascularize the irradiated bone. Hyperbaric Oxygen therapy (HBO) reduces the risk of failure of the implant because it increases the number of capillaries and fibroblasts. However, this was not observed in this review which agrees with results of Esposito who found that HBO is not essential.

Conclusion:

Minimum waiting period of 6 months postradiotherapy prior to dental implant placement is unlikely to be the most suitable, and healing periods with duration over 1 year may be beneficial.

Topic:prophylactic antibiotics

Authors:Sharaf B, Dodson TB.

Title:Does the use of prophylactic antibiotics decrease implant failure?

Source:Oral Maxillofac Surg Clin North Am. 2011 Nov;23(4):547-50

Type:literature review

Rating:high quality evidence used

Keywords: antibiotic use, implant failure

Background:Despite the high success rate, implant failures do occur. Failure can attributable to implant-related, patient-related, and surgical technique-related factors. Bacterial colonization of the implant surface and surgical site infection have be implicated in early implant failure. Once an infection ensues at the implant site, its eradication is usually difficult, and may lead to removal of the implant. For this reason, various regimens have been suggested to minimize early infections after implant placement. However routine use of antibiotics is not without risk.

Purpose: to answer the question, “in patients receiving dental implants, does the administration of prophylactic antibiotics reduce early implant failure?”

Materials and Methods:The authors searched using the following Medical Subject Headings (MeSH): antimicrobial agents, antibiotics or prophylactic antibiotics, and dental implants. Inclusion criteria:1) randomized controlled clinical trials, (2) meta-analysis or systematic review. The primary predictor variable was antibiotic therapy, classified as a preoperative dose of antibiotics, preoperative and postoperative antibiotic treatment, and no antibiotics. The primary outcome variable was implant failure. The secondary outcome variable was post- operative infection. Each article was reviewed and data summarized for the following variables: sample size, antibiotic use, implant failure, and postoperative infections. The treatment effect was measured using absolute risk reduction (ARR), which is defined as the absolute difference in failure rates between the intervention and control groups. The number needed to treat (NNT), calculated as the reciprocal of ARR, is defined as the number of implants that must be placed with antibiotic use to prevent 1 implant failure. Five articles were selected for review.Four studies were randomized controlled trials.

 

Results:a meta-analysis of the 4 RCTs included 1007 patients receiving a total of 2020 implants showed more implant failures in the groups not receiving antibiotics, with a statistically significant difference. The number of patients that needed to be treated with antibiotics to prevent 1 patient from having implant failure was 33.

Bottom Line: in the authors opinion, based on their review – significant reduction in implant failure was observed when patients received 2g Amoxicillin 1 hr preoperatively or 1 g amoxicillin 1 hr preoperatively followed by 500mg 4 times daily for 2 days postoperatively.

Critique:There are some drawbacks to the RCTs reviewed. The follow-up time varied from 3 months in 1 trialand 4 months in 2 trials to 5 months in 1 trial.Decreasing the follow-up period may decrease the number of failed implants and may overestimate the effect of antibiotics on the primary outcome variable: implant failure. Another drawback is the use of bone substitutes and other bone-regenerative procedures at the time of implant placement, which may affect implant healing and failure rates. The use of bone-regenerative procedures was reported in 2 studies.In addition, the effect of timing of implant placement (delayed or immediately after extraction) may potentially increase implant failure rates. Esposito and colleaguesdemonstrated in a logistic regression analysis that patients in the RCT who received immediate post-extraction implants had a 9% failure rate versus 2% in the delayed group, regardless of antibiotic use (P<.001).

Topic:Antibiotics

Author: Ahmad N, Saad N.

Title:Effects of antibiotics on dental implants: a review.

Source:J Clin Med Res. 2012 Feb;4(1):1-6.

Type:Systematic review

Rating: Good

Keywords:antibiotic, success rate, dental implants.

Purpose:to review the current literature and information on dental implants and prophylaxis. Our objectives are to ask whether or not antibiotics are beneficial to implants, and in what instances pre- and/or postoperative antibiotic regimes should be prescribed.

Material and methods: The systematic literature review was completed using the electronic databases, Pubmed, Medpilot and Medline. Retrospective or prospective controlled studies which met the inclusion criterion, were English studies conducted between 1955 to January 2009. Administrations of various prophylactic antibiotics regimens were accepted. An unsuccessful dental implant was characterized by any implant which failed within the first 3 months, and studies with follow ups within the first 5 months were included. Studies with loading were not included and only studies using low risk patients were included.

Results:Out of 853 studies, only 6 studies were included in this systematic review that met the criteria. 11406 implants used in this literature review, cases with no antibiotics had a 92 % success rate, cases with pre-op antibiotic alone had a 96% success rate, cases with post-op antibiotic alone had a 97% success

Conclusion:The cost-benefit ratio of any therapy, including all potential adverse effects, must be determined. The negative effects associated with use of antibiotic therapy must be assessed in comparison to the costs and morbidity related to treating infective endocarditis or infected prosthetic materials.

Critics:many studies were excluded because they did not include comparisons between no antibiotics, pre-op, post-op antibiotic use.

Topic: Antibiotics

Authors: Esposito M, Grusovin MG, Worthington HV

Tittle:Interventions for replacing missing teeth: antibiotics at dental implant placement to prevent complications.

Source: Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2013 Jul 31;7:CD004152.

Type: Systematic Review

Rating: Good

Keywords:antibiotics, failure, survival

Purpose:To assess the beneficial or harmful effects of systemic prophylactic antibiotics at dental implant placement versus no antibiotic or placebo administration and, if antibiotics are beneficial, to determine which type, dosage and duration is the most effective.

Methods:

Cochrane Oral Health Group’s Trials Register (to 17 June 2013), the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL) (The Cochrane Library 2013, Issue 5), MEDLINE via OVID (1946 to 17 June 2013) and EMBASE via OVID (1980 to 17 June 2013). Selection criteria: RCTs with a follow-up of at least three months, that compared the administration of various prophylactic antibiotic regimens versus no antibiotics to people undergoing dental implant placement. Outcome measures included prosthesis failures, implant failures, postoperative infections and adverse events.

Results:

Six RCTs with 1162 participants were included:

  • 3 trials compared 2 g of preoperative amoxicillin versus placebo (927 participants)

  • 1 compared 3 g of preoperative amoxicillin versus placebo (55 participants),

  • 1 compared 1 g of preoperative amoxicillin plus 500 mg four times a day for two days versus no antibiotics (80 participants), and

  • 1 compared four groups: (1) 2 g of preoperative amoxicillin; (2) 2 g of preoperative amoxicillin plus 1 g twice a day for seven days; (3) 1 g of postoperative amoxicillin twice a day for seven days, and (4) no antibiotics (100 participants).

  • The overall evidence was considered to be of moderate quality.

  • The meta- analyses of the six trials showed a statistically significant higher number of participants experiencing implant failures in the group not receiving antibiotics. The number needed to treat for one additional beneficial outcome (NNTB) to prevent one person having an implant failure is 25, based on an implant failure rate of 6% in participants not receiving antibiotics. There was borderline statistical significance for prosthesis failures, with no statistically significant differences for infections, or adverse events. No conclusive information can be derived from the only trial that compared three different durations of antibiotic prophylaxis since no event (implant/prosthesis failures, infections or adverse events) occurred in any of the 25 participants included in each study group.

Conclusion:

Scientific evidence suggests that antibiotics are beneficial for reducing failure of dental implants. Specifically 2 g or 3 g of amoxicillin given orally, as a single administration, one hour preoperatively significantly reduces failure of dental implants. It might be sensible to suggest the use of a single dose of 2 g prophylactic amoxicillin prior to dental implant placement. It is still unknown whether postoperative antibiotics are beneficial, and which antibiotic is the most effective.

Topic:antibiotics and implant failures/infections

Authors:Ata-Ali J, Ata-Ali F, Ata-Ali F.

Title:Do antibiotics decrease implant failure and postoperative infections? A systematic review and meta-analysis.

Source:Int J Oral Maxillofac Surg. 2013 Jun 25.

Type:Systematic review and meta-analysis

Rating:Good

Keywords:dental implants, infection, disease, antibiotic, meta-analysis, implant surgery

Purpose:To systematically review and perform a meta-analysis to determine does the use of antibiotics reduce the frequency of implant failure and postoperative infection.

Methods:A manual and PubMed electronic search was conducted for RCTs that met the inclusion criteria with a control group that did not receive antibiotics. Four RCTs were included in the final review.

Results:Four RCTs included had a total of 2063 implants in a total of 1002 patients. Antibiotic use significantly lowered implant failure rate with an OR 0.331. One needs to treat 48 patients in order to prevent one patient from having an implant failure. In contrast, antibiotic use did not significantly reduce the incidence of post op infection. The meta-analysis found that there is evidence in favor of systemic antibiotic use in patients receiving dental implants.

Conclusion:

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