| Literature DB >> 29086193 |
Waldemar Reich1, Ramona Schweyen2, Christian Heinzelmann3, Jeremias Hey2, Bilal Al-Nawas3, Alexander Walter Eckert3.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Short implants often have the disadvantage of reduced primary stability. The present study was conducted to evaluate the feasibility and safety of a new expandable short dental implant system intended to increase primary stability.Entities:
Keywords: Bone atrophy; Expandable; Implant stability; Macrodesign; Short implant
Year: 2017 PMID: 29086193 PMCID: PMC5662521 DOI: 10.1186/s40729-017-0107-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Implant Dent ISSN: 2198-4034
Patient recruitment
| Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria |
|---|---|
| 1. Adult patients, male and female | 1. Comorbidity ASA category ≥ III |
| 2. Partially/totally edentulous patients | 2. Pregnancy, bruxism |
| 3. Alveolar process atrophy Cawood et Howell category ≥ IV | 3. Smoking ≥ 10 cigarettes/day |
| 4. Minimum vertical bone height of 7–9 mm for placement of short implants (5–7-mm length) | 4. Radiotherapy ≥ 50 Gy [ |
| 5. Patients without willingness to accept vertical bone augmentation | 6. Psychiatric comorbidity that could influence course of treatment |
| 7. Untreated or poorly controlled diabetes mellitus | |
| 8. Highly atrophic jaws that require vertical augmentation |
Surgical treatment protocol
| Surgical protocol | Bone quality | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| D1 | D2 | D3 | D4 | |
| 1. Drilling sequence (splint) | Last drill | Last drill | Second to last drill | Second to last drill |
| 2. Condensing preparation | – | – | (Analogue to last drill) | Analogue to last drill |
| 3. Implant insertion (maximum torque ≤ 40 N cm) | ||||
| 4. Expansion (maximum torque ≤ 40 N cm) | ||||
| 5. Evaluation of primary stability by resonance frequency analysis, primary wound closure | ||||
| 6. Postoperative digital radiogram | ||||
| 7. Re-entry after a conventional period of submerged healing (mandible 3 months, maxilla 6 months), evaluation of secondary stability by resonance frequency analysis and insertion of healing abutments | ||||
| 8. Postoperative digital radiogram | ||||
Fig. 1a Closed short expandable dental implant (4.1 × 7 mm). The implant-abutment connection is characterised by an internal hexagon for rotation stability, combining the advantages of conical and parallel surfaces to reduce microgaps and micromovement [68]. The microthread concept and platform switching concept are implemented in the implant shoulder to reduce periimplant bone strain [53]. b Manual fixation of the expansion tool. Take note of the distance between both yellow rings. c Completion of the expansion process using the ratchet. Take note of the contact between both yellow rings. d Opened short expandable dental implant (4.1 × 7 mm). The expanded implant provides an increased bone-to-implant interface (pyramid shape) in the apical portion [54]. e Cross-section view of the implant apex. The apical expansion process is characterised by the unfolding of four wings, which are connected by four foils. D1: diameter of the closed implant. D2: diameter of the opened implant. f Top view of the expanded implant. The expanded implant (4.1-mm diameter) displays an apical diameter of 4.7 mm and length of the edge (base) of 4.4 mm
Prosthetic treatment protocol
| Type of prosthetic treatment | Session | Procedure | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fixed denture (bridge) | 1 | Open impression | |
| 2 | Abutment check, set-up | ||
| 3 | Check and insertion of the suprastructure | ||
| Combined fixed-removable denture | Telescope | 1 | Open impression (implants and stumps) |
| 2 | Jaw relation (wax splint) | ||
| 3 | Aesthetic check | ||
| 4 | Check of the primary telescope, fixation impression | ||
| 5 | Complete check | ||
| 6 | Insertion of the definitive denture | ||
| Removable denture | Jaw bar | 1 | Open impression |
| 2 | Abutment check | ||
| 3 | Jaw relation (wax splint) | ||
| 4 | Aesthetic check | ||
| 5 | Jaw bar check | ||
| 6 | Complete check | ||
| 7 | Finishing | ||
| Ball attachment | 1 | Impression of the edentulous alveolar ridge | |
| 2 | Jaw relation (wax splint) | ||
| 3 | Aesthetic check | ||
| 4 | Chairside insertion of the matrices | ||
Clinical characteristics of the study cohort
| Patient | Sex | Age (years) | Implant position ( | Indication categorya | Bone quality | Prosthetic treatment | Follow-up (months) | Implant failure |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. T. I. | F | 80 | Maxilla 15, 13, 11, 21, 25 (Σ = 5) | IIa | D4 | Telescope | 37 |
|
| 2. G. S. | F | 65 | Mandible 34, 32, 42, 44 (Σ = 4) | IIIb | D1 | Ball attachment | 34 | None |
| 3. S. Sa. | F | 64 | Maxilla 14, 12, 22, 24 (Σ = 4) | IIIab | D4 | Jaw bar | 34 | None |
| 4. Th. F. | M | 76 | Mandible 35, 36, 37 (Σ = 3) | IIb | D1 | Bridge | 33 | None |
| 5. A. M. | F | 44 | Maxilla 16, 15, 14 (Σ = 3) | IIa | D3 | Bridge | 32 | None |
| 6. S. M. | M | 53 | Maxilla 16, 14, 12 (Σ = 3) | IIa | D3 | Ball attachment | 32 |
|
| 7. K. S. | F | 52 | Mandible 35, 36, 37 (Σ = 3) | IIb | D2 | Bridge | 29 | None |
| 8. R. C. | F | 59 | Mandible 35, 36 (Σ = 2) | IIb | D2 | Bridge | 24 | None |
| 9. W. K. | F | 72 | Mandible 47, 45, 43 (Σ = 3) | IIb | D2 | Bridge | 23 | None |
FDI implant position according to the World Dental Federation
aIndication categories (IIa, IIb, IIIa, IIIb) with regard to the amount of implants [35]
bModified due to local conditions
cImplant loss before loading
dImplant loss after loading
Fig. 2Cumulative implant survival over the follow-up period. The Kaplan-Meyer diagram visualises the analysis of implant survival in the maxilla and in the mandible (log rank test, p = 0.173) over the follow-up period up to 37 months (Table 4)
Fig. 3a Primary implant stability. The histogram visualises the distribution of the implant stability quotients (ISQ) for both jaws measured by resonance frequency analysis (Osstell AB, Göteborg, Sweden). b Secondary implant stability. The histogram shows the distribution of the implant stability quotients (ISQ) of osseointegrated implants. According to the measurement implant stability was classified as low with ISQ values < 60, medium with ISQ values 60–70, and high with values ISQ > 70 [34]
Fig. 4a–h Prosthetic restauration—follow-up examination. Intraoral and perioral views of a rehabilitated female patient. (She asked explicitly only for implantological treatment in the mandible.)
Fig. 5a Postoperative orthopantomogram. b Follow-up orthopantomogram. c Follow-up standard periapical radiogram (implants i42 and i44). d Follow-up standard periapical radiogram (implants i32 and i34)