Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Long‐term retrospective follow‐up of turned and moderately rough implants in the edentulous jaw

2015; Wiley; Volume: 27; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1111/clr.12602

ISSN

1600-0501

Autores

Stefan Vandeweghe, Deon Ferreira, Louis Vermeersch, Margot Mariën, Hugo De Bruyn,

Tópico(s)

Dental Radiography and Imaging

Resumo

Abstract Aim To compare the long‐term clinical outcome of turned vs. moderately rough implants. Materials and methods Patients treated with implants in the edentulous mandible and/or maxilla were invited for a clinical examination. After prosthesis removal, the pocket depth was measured and the bleeding scored. Also, a new radiograph was taken for bone loss evaluation. Patients were also requested to rate their satisfaction with the treatment. Results One hundred and ninety‐seven implants in 33 patients were evaluated. After a mean follow‐up of 172 months ( SD 42, range 120–252), the mean loss was 1.61 mm ( SD 1.35, range 0.00–8.25). Bone loss was higher in the maxilla compared to the mandible ( P < 0.001), and at implants, that was restored on implant level ( P = 0.003). Multivariate analyses demonstrated a significant effect of implant surface roughness and time of loading on bone loss. Smoking, on the other hand, did not affect the outcome. Mean pocket probing depth was 3.64 mm ( SD 0.96, range 1.25–7.25). A total of 4.1% of the implants demonstrated signs of peri‐implantitis. The overall patient satisfaction rate was 98.5%. Conclusion Implant treatment in the edentulous jaw has a predictable long‐term outcome with limited complications.

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