Opzioni
Short versus longer implants: A 5-year randomised controlled trial
2014
Periodico
DENTAL MATERIALS
Abstract
Purpose: To evaluate whether 6.6mm long implants could
be a suitable alternative to longer implants placed in vertically
augmented atrophic posterior mandibles.
Methods and materials: Sixty partially edentulous patients
having 7–8mm of residual crestal height and at least 5.5mm
thickness measured on CT scans above the mandibular canal
were randomised according to a parallel group design either
to receive 1–3 submerged 6.6mm long implants or 9.6mm or
longer implants (30 patients per group) placed in vertically
augmented bone. Bone was augmented with interposition
anorganic bovine bone blocks covered by resorbable barriers.
Grafts were left to heal for 5 months before implant
placement. Four months after provisional acrylic prostheses
were delivered, replaced, after 4 months, by definitive
metal-ceramic prostheses. Outcome measures were: prosthesis and implant failures, complications, and radiographic peri-implant marginal bone level changes. All patients were followed up to 5 year after loading.
Results: Five years after loading 8 patients dropped out:
3 from the short implant group and 5 from the augmented
group. The augmentation procedure failed in 2 patients and
only 6.6mm long implants could be inserted. There were
no statistically significant differences for prosthesis and
implant failures. Five prostheses failed in 4 patients of the
short implant group versus 5 prostheses in 5 patients in the
augmented group. Five short implants failed in 3 patients
versus 3 long implants in 3 patients. There were statistically
more complications in augmented patients (25 complications
in 21 augmented patients versus 6 complications in 6 patients
of the short implant group). Both groups gradually lost
peri-implant bone in a statistically significant way. Five years
after loading, short implant group patients lost an average
of 1.49mm peri-implant bone compared with 2.34mm in
the augmented group. Short implants experienced statistically
significantly less bone loss (0.82mm, CI95% 0.48; 1.16,
P < 0.0001) than long implants.
Conclusion: When residual bone height over the mandibular
canal is between 7 and 8mm, 6.6mmshort implants could
be an interesting alternative to vertical augmentation in posterior atrophic mandibles since the treatment is faster, cheaper and associated with less morbidity. Longer follow-ups may still be needed to confirm these results, however the medium term prognosis (5 years after loading) of short implants is at least as good as those of longer implants in placed vertically augmented mandibles.
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