S Tecco1, M G Grusovin2, S Sciara3, F Bova4, G Pantaleo3, P Capparé1. 1. Dental School, Vita-Salute San Raffaele University and IRCCS San Raffaele, Milan, Italy. 2. Dental School, Vita-Salute San Raffaele University, Milan, Italy. 3. UniSR-Social Lab (Research Methods), Faculty of Psychology, Vita-Salute San Raffaele University, Milan, Italy. 4. Center for Oral Hygiene and Prevention, Dental School, Vita-Salute San Raffaele University and IRCCS San Raffaele, Milan, Italy.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: This study evaluated the strength of the association between three widely used clinical indexes considered as distal behavioural indicators of attitude-related oral status (an index of oral hygiene, the plaque index [PI] and two periodontal indexes, that is the presence of bleeding on probing [BOP] and of pockets probing depth [PPD]) and secondary implant failure due to peri-implantitis in patients rehabilitated with cemented prosthesis. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The study included patients who underwent implant-prosthetic rehabilitation and had joined the programme of maintenance of the same hospital. Implant failures, number of months between implant insertion and implant loading, and patients' surgical protocol were monitored and recorded. Further, PI, BOP and PPD-all attitude-related indicators of oral hygiene and periodontal inflammation-were recorded and related, in terms of odds ratios (ORs ) and corresponding risk factors, to secondary implant failures. RESULTS: A total of 1427 patients (2673 implants) were enrolled. The follow-up ranged from 1.5 to 9 years (mean 5.3 years±1.3). The cumulative survival rate was 98.01%. Thirty-two patients (36 implants, 1.36% of all implants) had implant failure. A statistically significant association between PI, BOP, PPD and secondary failures due to peri-implantitis was observed. CONCLUSION: Within the limitations of this study, all three attitude-related behavioural indicators-the plaque index (PI), bleeding on probing (BOP) and abnormal probing pocket depth (PPD)-proved to be significant risk indicators for secondary implant failure due to peri-implantitis, both from a clinical and from a socio-psychological attitude-related perspective.
OBJECTIVE: This study evaluated the strength of the association between three widely used clinical indexes considered as distal behavioural indicators of attitude-related oral status (an index of oral hygiene, the plaque index [PI] and two periodontal indexes, that is the presence of bleeding on probing [BOP] and of pockets probing depth [PPD]) and secondary implant failure due to peri-implantitis in patients rehabilitated with cemented prosthesis. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The study included patients who underwent implant-prosthetic rehabilitation and had joined the programme of maintenance of the same hospital. Implant failures, number of months between implant insertion and implant loading, and patients' surgical protocol were monitored and recorded. Further, PI, BOP and PPD-all attitude-related indicators of oral hygiene and periodontal inflammation-were recorded and related, in terms of odds ratios (ORs ) and corresponding risk factors, to secondary implant failures. RESULTS: A total of 1427 patients (2673 implants) were enrolled. The follow-up ranged from 1.5 to 9 years (mean 5.3 years±1.3). The cumulative survival rate was 98.01%. Thirty-two patients (36 implants, 1.36% of all implants) had implant failure. A statistically significant association between PI, BOP, PPD and secondary failures due to peri-implantitis was observed. CONCLUSION: Within the limitations of this study, all three attitude-related behavioural indicators-the plaque index (PI), bleeding on probing (BOP) and abnormal probing pocket depth (PPD)-proved to be significant risk indicators for secondary implant failure due to peri-implantitis, both from a clinical and from a socio-psychological attitude-related perspective.
Authors: S Tecco; S Sciara; G Pantaleo; A Nota; A Visone; S Germani; E Polizzi; E F Gherlone Journal: BMC Pediatr Date: 2018-04-13 Impact factor: 2.125
Authors: Philipp Sahrmann; Fabienne Gilli; Daniel B Wiedemeier; Thomas Attin; Patrick R Schmidlin; Lamprini Karygianni Journal: Microorganisms Date: 2020-05-01
Authors: Alessandro Nota; Luca Palumbo; Giuseppe Pantaleo; Enrico Felice Gherlone; Simona Tecco Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health Date: 2020-06-05 Impact factor: 3.390