Premium
A Retrospective Analysis of Early and Immediately Loaded Osseotite Implants in Cross‐Arch Rehabilitations in Edentulous Maxillas and Mandibles Up to 7 Years
Author(s) -
Browaeys Hilde,
Defrancq Joel,
Dierens Melissa C.A.,
Miremadi Resa,
Vandeweghe Stefan,
Van de Velde Tommie,
De Bruyn Hugo
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
clinical implant dentistry and related research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.338
H-Index - 85
eISSN - 1708-8208
pISSN - 1523-0899
DOI - 10.1111/j.1708-8208.2011.00367.x
Subject(s) - arch , dentistry , medicine , orthodontics , engineering , civil engineering
Background: Immediate loading of full‐arch restorations yields good results in selected cases, but long‐term follow‐up and the outcome in compromised bone are scarcely evaluated. Purpose: To evaluate immediately loaded Osseotite implants (Biomet 3i, Palm Beach, FL, USA) installed in healed or grafted bone, with regard to implant survival and peri‐implant bone loss up to 7 years in function. Materials and Methods: Information was retrospectively retrieved from 83 patients' records with 749 Osseotite implants supporting immediately loaded semipermanent full‐arch acrylic restorations. Five hundred sixty‐eight (75.8%) implants were placed in healed bone and 181 (24.2%) in augmented bone, regenerated with sinus lifting and/or onlay/inlay grafts with/without biomaterials and membranes. Implant survival and success based on radiological peri‐implant bone loss were registered. Wilcoxon rank sum tests evaluated peri‐implant bone loss in compromised versus healed bone or between jaws or time intervals with p < .05 as statistically significant. Results: Sixteen of 749 implants failed (2.1%), 11/343 in maxilla (3.2%) and 5/406 (1.2%) in mandible. After 7 years, the cumulative failure rate was 9%. Mean peri‐implant bone loss increased to 1.2 mm (SD 1.0) during the first 2 years but remained unchanged thereafter. Around implants in grafted bone, on average, 0.3 mm more bone loss was found. Conclusion: The Osseotite implants offer a predictable long‐term outcome in terms of implant survival and stable peri‐implant bone under immediate loading even in grafted bone. However, the high incidence of technical repair because of fractures of the semipermanent provisionals requires attention because it may be negative from a cost‐benefit perspective. Implants in grafted bone show a tendency to a more pronounced initial bone remodeling without clinical consequence in the long term.