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Esthetic evaluation of single‐tooth implants in the anterior mandible
Author(s) -
Hof Markus,
Tepper Gabor,
Koller Barbara,
Krainhöfner Martin,
Watzek Georg,
Pommer Bernhard
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
clinical oral implants research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.407
H-Index - 161
eISSN - 1600-0501
pISSN - 0905-7161
DOI - 10.1111/clr.12210
Subject(s) - dentistry , medicine , crown (dentistry) , implant , mandible (arthropod mouthpart) , anterior teeth , orthodontics , surgery , botany , biology , genus
Objectives Single‐tooth replacement of anterior mandibular teeth is frequently complicated by insufficient bucco‐lingual bone width and limited mesio‐distal space available for implant placement. The aim of the present study was to assess implant esthetics in the partially edentulous anterior mandible. Material and methods Esthetic evaluation of 43 anterior mandibular single‐tooth implants in 15 women and 28 men was performed using esthetic indices ( PES = P ink E sthetic S core, PI = P apilla I ndex, SES = S ubjective E sthetic S core) as well as subjective patients' V isual A nalogue S cale ( VAS ) ratings. Clinical and radiological parameters (implant and crown dimensions, pocket depth, bleeding on probing, plaque, keratinized mucosa, marginal bone level, and distance to adjacent teeth) were tested for influence. Results Implant esthetics were judged satisfactory ( PES ≤10) in 42% of implants compared with a patient satisfaction rate of 87%. Correlation between objective indices ( PES / PI : r s = 0.62, PES / SES : r s = −0.73, PI / SES : r s = −0.48) was highly significant ( P ≤ 0.001); however, no association to subjective patients' ratings could be observed. Type of prosthetic restoration (single crown vs. tulip‐shaped double crowns), mesio‐distal crown width as well as anatomic crown length significantly affected esthetic scores. Patients' judgment, by contrast, could not be associated to any prognostic factor. Conclusion Subjective patient satisfaction with implant esthetics in the partially edentulous anterior mandible is high, however, remains hard to predict or objectively quantify.