Literature DB >> 29806663

Immediately loaded zygomatic implants vs conventional dental implants in augmented atrophic maxillae: 1-year post-loading results from a multicentre randomised controlled trial.

Rubén Davó, Pietro Felice, Roberto Pistilli, Carlo Barausse, Carlos Marti-Pages, Ada Ferrer-Fuertes, Daniela Rita Ippolito, Marco Esposito.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: To compare the clinical outcome of immediately loaded cross-arch maxillary prostheses supported by zygomatic implants vs conventional implants placed in augmented bone.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: In total, 71 edentulous patients with severely atrophic maxillas without sufficient bone volumes for placing dental implants, or when it was possible to place only two implants in the anterior area (minimal diameter 3.5 mm and length of 8 mm) and less than 4 mm of bone height subantrally, were randomised according to a parallel group design to receive zygomatic implants (35 patients) to be loaded immediately vs grafting with a xenograft, followed after 6 months of graft consolidation by placement of six to eight conventional dental implants submerged for 4 months (36 patients). For immediate loading, zygomatic implants had to be inserted with an insertion torque superior to 40 Ncm. Screw-retained metal reinforced acrylic provisional prostheses were provided, to be replaced by definitive Procera Implant Bridge Titanium prostheses (Nobel Biocare, Göteborg, Sweden), with ceramic or acrylic veneer materials 4 months after initial loading. Outcome measures were: prosthesis, implant and augmentation failures, any complications, quality of life (OHIP-14), patients' number of days with total or partial impaired activity, time to function and number of dental visits, assessed by independent assessors. Patients were followed up to 1 year after loading.
RESULTS: No augmentation procedure failed. Five patients dropped out from the augmentation group. Six prostheses could not be delivered or failed in the augmentation group vs one prosthesis in the zygomatic group, the difference being statistically significant (difference in proportions = -16.5%; P = 0.045; 95% CI: -0.34 to -0.01). Eight patients lost 35 implants in the augmentation group vs two patients who lost four zygomatic implants, the difference being statistically significant (difference in proportions = -20.1%; P = 0.037; 95% CI: -0.38 to -0.02). A total of 14 augmented patients were affected by 22 complications, vs 28 zygomatic patients (40 complications), the difference being statistically significant (difference in proportions = 34.8%; P = 0.005; 95% CI: 0.12 to 0.54). The 1-year OHIP-14 score was 3.93 ± 5.86 for augmented patients and 3.97 ± 4.32 for zygomatic patients with no statistically significant differences between groups (mean difference = 0.04; 95% CI: -2.56 to 2.65; P = 0.747). Both groups had significantly improved OHIP-14 scores from before rehabilitation (P < 0.001 for both augmented and zygomatic patients). On average, the number of days of total infirmity was 7.42 ± 3.17 for the augmented group and 7.17 ± 1.96 for the zygomatic group, the difference not being statistically significant (mean difference = -0.25; 95% CI: -1.52 to 1.02; P = 0.692). The number of days of partial infirmity were on average 14.24 ± 4.64 for the augmented group and 12.17 ± 3.82 for the zygomatic group, the difference being statistically significant (mean difference = -2.07; 95% CI: -4.12 to -0.02; P = 0.048). The mean number of days that needed to have a functional prosthesis was 444.32 ± 207.86 for augmented patients and 1.34 ± 2.27 for zygomatic patients, the difference being statistically significant (mean difference = -442.98; 95% CI: -513.10 to -372.86; P < 0.001). The average number of dental visits was 19.72 ± 12.22 for augmented patients and 15.12 ± 5.76 for zygomatic patients, the difference not being statistically significant (mean difference = -4.61; 95% CI: -9.31 to 0.92; P = 0.055).
CONCLUSIONS: Preliminary 1-year post-loading data suggest that immediately loaded zygomatic implants were associated with statistically significantly fewer prosthetic failures (one vs six patients), implant failures (two vs eight patients) and time needed to functional loading (1.3 days vs 444.3 days) when compared to augmentation procedures and conventionally loaded dental implants. Even if more complications were reported for zygomatic implants, they proved to be a better rehabilitation modality for severely atrophic maxillae. Long-term data are absolutely needed to confirm or dispute these preliminary results.

Entities:  

Keywords:  atrophic maxilla; bone augmentation; bone substitute; immediate loading; zygomatic implants

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29806663

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Oral Implantol        ISSN: 1756-2406            Impact factor:   3.123


  8 in total

1.  Comparative evaluation of extrasinus versus intrasinus approach for zygomatic implant placement.

Authors:  Deepika Kumari Jain; U S Pal; Shadab Mohammad; Divya Mehrotra; Ravi Katrolia; Saatvik Shandilya; Lakshya Yadav; Arunesh Kumar Tiwari
Journal:  J Oral Biol Craniofac Res       Date:  2022-09-10

2.  Oral Rehabilitation with Zygomatic Implants in a Patient with Cleft Palate.

Authors:  Guilherme José Pimentel Lopes de Oliveira; Mariana Schaffer Brackmann; Larissa Carvalho Trojan; Paulo Domingos Ribeiro Júnior; Luis Eduardo Marques Padovan
Journal:  Case Rep Dent       Date:  2019-05-06

3.  Round and flat zygomatic implants: effectiveness after a 1-year follow-up non-interventional study.

Authors:  Carlos Aparicio; Waldemar D Polido; James Chow; Rubén Davó; Bilal Al-Nawas
Journal:  Int J Implant Dent       Date:  2022-04-01

4.  Accuracy of a Computer-Aided Dynamic Navigation System in the Placement of Zygomatic Dental Implants: An In Vitro Study.

Authors:  Juan Ramón González Rueda; Irene García Ávila; Víctor Manuel de Paz Hermoso; Elena Riad Deglow; Álvaro Zubizarreta-Macho; Jesús Pato Mourelo; Javier Montero Martín; Sofía Hernández Montero
Journal:  J Clin Med       Date:  2022-03-05       Impact factor: 4.241

Review 5.  A Narrative Review on the Effectiveness of Bone Regeneration Procedures with OsteoBiol® Collagenated Porcine Grafts: The Translational Research Experience over 20 Years.

Authors:  Tea Romasco; Margherita Tumedei; Francesco Inchingolo; Pamela Pignatelli; Lorenzo Montesani; Giovanna Iezzi; Morena Petrini; Adriano Piattelli; Natalia Di Pietro
Journal:  J Funct Biomater       Date:  2022-08-18

6.  Navigated Antral Bone Expansion (NABE): a prospective study on 35 patients with 4 months of follow-up post implant loading.

Authors:  Luigi V Stefanelli; Nicola Pranno; Francesca De Angelis; Silvia La Rosa; Antonella Polimeni; Stefano Di Carlo
Journal:  BMC Oral Health       Date:  2020-10-07       Impact factor: 2.757

Review 7.  Survival Rate and Prosthetic and Sinus Complications of Zygomatic Dental Implants for the Rehabilitation of the Atrophic Edentulous Maxilla: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.

Authors:  David Gutiérrez Muñoz; Caterina Obrador Aldover; Álvaro Zubizarreta-Macho; Héctor González Menéndez; Juan Lorrio Castro; David Peñarrocha-Oltra; José María Montiel-Company; Sofía Hernández Montero
Journal:  Biology (Basel)       Date:  2021-06-29

8.  Thermal Load and Heat Transfer in Dental Titanium Implants: An Ex Vivo-Based Exact Analytical/Numerical Solution to the 'Heat Equation'.

Authors:  Grigorios P Panotopoulos; Ziyad S Haidar
Journal:  Dent J (Basel)       Date:  2022-03-10
  8 in total

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