| Literature DB >> 35747499 |
Chandrashekhar Pandey1, Dinesh Rokaya2, Bishwa Prakash Bhattarai2.
Abstract
In a society highly conscious of esthetics, prosthetic rehabilitation of lost teeth with tissue-integrated implants has gained wide acceptance and demand by patients and clinicians. The backbone of these tissue-integrated implants is the biotechnical process of osseointegration. Although the concept has been introduced and discussed for ages, the deepening knowledge about its cellular and molecular mechanisms has led the researchers to borrow further into the factors influencing the process of osseointegration. This has aided in the hastening and improving the process of osseointegration by exploiting several, even the minutest, details and events taking place in this natural process. Recently, due to the high esthetic expectations of the patients, the implants are being loaded immediately, which demands a high degree of implant stability. Implant stability, especially secondary stability, largely depends on bone formation and integration of implants to the osseous tissues. Various factors that influence the rate and success of osseointegration can either be categorized as those related to implant characteristics like the physical and chemical macro- and microdesign of implants or the bone characteristics like the amount and quality of bone and the local and systemic host conditions, or the time or protocol followed for the functional loading of the dental implant. To address the shortcomings in osseointegration due to any of the factors, it is mandatory that continuous and reliable monitoring of the status of osseointegration is done. This review attempts to encompass the mechanisms, factors affecting, and methods to assess osseointegration, followed by a discussion on the recent advances and future perspectives in dental implantology to enhance the process of osseointegration. The review was aimed at igniting the inquisitive minds to usher further the development of technology that enhances osseointegration.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35747499 PMCID: PMC9213185 DOI: 10.1155/2022/6170452
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.246
Chronology of cellular and molecular events of osseointegration after implant placement.
| Timeline after implant placement | Cellular/molecular event |
|---|---|
| 1st day | (i) Secretion of growth factors by water molecules and platelet absorption at the site of implant placed [ |
| 2ndday | (i) Local ischemia and necrosis toward the center of the implant site due to the capillary breakdown [ |
| 3rd day | (i) Activation of Runx2 and Op (osteoblast-related transcription factors) by the cells around the implant [ |
| 4th day | (i) Necrotic bone resorption and the formation of some bone-implant interface [ |
| 5th day | (i) Evidence of new bone formation and initiation of mineralization and matrix remodeling as indicated by the alkaline phosphatase activity [ |
| 7th day | (i) Recognizable bone matrix cohesion on surface of implant [ |
| 16th day | (i) Implant surface becomes entirely coated with mineralized tissues, osteoid, and dense matrix [ |
| 28th day | (i) Complete binding of bone along the implant surface formation of a volume of tissue layer comprised of collagen fibers and osteoblasts adjacent to the implants; alignment of collagen fibers running parallel to the implant's surface. Bone-to-implant contact of 46.3% is reached [ |
| End of the 12th week | (i) Establishment of a mature lamellar bone connection with the titanium surface leading to uniformity of bone formed on the implant's surface [ |
Figure 1Day 1 and day 2 after implant placement. Day 1: secretion of growth factors and migration of undifferentiated osteoblasts and pluripotent stem cells towards implant surface. Day 2: local ischemia and necrosis followed by recruitment of neutrophils and macrophages.
Figure 2Day 3 and day 4 after implant placement. Day 3: activation of osteoblast-related transcription factors by the cells around the implant. Day 4: resorption of necrotic bone and deposition of new bone at the bone-implant interface.
Figure 3Day 28 and 12th week after implant placement. Day 28: formation of new layer of bone adjacent to implant through contact and distant osteogenesis. End of 12th week: formation of a mature lamellar bone connection with the titanium surface.
Outcomes of microtopography enhancement techniques.
| Technique | Rationale | Preclinical data | Clinical data |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sandblasting and acid-etching | Sandblasting and acid-etching increases microroughness and surface area | Superior bone-to-implant contact (50-60%) at 3 and 6 months as compared to plasma-spraying (30-40%) and electropolished (20-25%) implants [ | Implant survival rate: 95.1%-98.8% [ |
| Grit-blasted, acid-etched, and neutralized implants | Macroroughness by grit-blasting; hydrophobic surface is changed to hydrophilic, increasing the wettability (water contact angle 0o) [ | Even the immediately loaded implants showed a higher degree of bone formation and satisfactory bone-to-implant contact [ | Success rate after one year of implant placement was 99.6% [ |
Outcomes of nanotopography enhancement techniques.
| Technique | Rationale | Preclinical data | Clinical data |
|---|---|---|---|
| Discrete crystalline deposition | CaP particles (20-100 nm) deposited on a double acid-etched surface by a sol-gel process exert a high adhesive force on the implant surface; bacterial adhesion is reduced [ | Disruption force required at the bone-implant interface is high; high osteoconduction [ | One year survival rate 94.9%-99.4% [ |
| Laser ablation | Generates a pattern of nanoscale microchannels that act as a biological seal by eliciting the connective tissue and bone attachment, inhibiting epithelial down growth [ | Dense cervical seal prevents apical migration of junctional epithelium [ | Two-year survival rate 96.1%; long-term comparative results not yet available [ |