These results clearly show the influence of the bone crest on the presence or absence of papillae between implants and adjacent teeth. The data also show a positive influence for the modified surgical technique, aimed at reconstructing papillae at the implant uncovering.
The purpose of this study was to evaluate retrospectively, after a period of 6-48 months follow-up of prosthetic loading, the survival rate of 103 zygomatic implants inserted in 55 totally edentulous severely resorbed upper jaws. Fifty-five consecutive patients, 41 females and 14 males, with severe maxillary bone resorption were rehabilitated by means of a fixed prosthesis supported by either 1 or 2 zygomatic implants, and 2-6 maxillary implants. This retrospective study calculated the success and survival rates at both the prosthetic and implant levels. Out of 55 prostheses, 52 were screwed on top of the implants, while 3 were modified due to loss of standard additional implants and transformed in semimovable prosthesis. Although osseointegration in the zygomatic region is difficult to evaluate, no zygomatic implant was considered fibrously encapsulated and they are still in function. This study confirms that zygoma bone can offer a predictable anchorage and support function for a fixed prosthesis in severely resorbed maxillae.
In this retrospective study of Brånemark system oral implants, 75 consecutive patients were treated with 84 implants for single-tooth replacement from 1988 to 1993. Two implants were lost and not replaced: the first one before the abutment connection, the latter during the first year in function. The cumulative failure rate reached 2.4% during the 5-year period. Seventy-one percent of the implants were located in the incisor/canine region of both jaws. Twenty-six per cent of the implants were inserted in special presurgical or surgical conditions. The mean annual bone loss as scored on radiograph, was 0.8 mm during the first year and 0.1 mm the following years. Different implant designs were used, a more pronounced bone loss was observed for the conical implant. The present data shows that the cumulative failure rate for single Brånemark implants and radiographic bone loss is similar to that found around implants used for the treatment of complete and partial edentulism.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.