Comparative Study of the Early Loading of Resorbable Blasting Media and Sandblasting with Large-grit and Acid-etching Surface Implants: A Retrospective Cohort Study원문보기
Purpose: This study compares the prognosis (the survival rate and marginal bone loss) of resorbable blasting media (RBM) surface implants and sandblasting with large-grit and acid-etching (SLA) surface implants in the early loading. Methods: This study targeted 123 patients treated by implants insta...
Purpose: This study compares the prognosis (the survival rate and marginal bone loss) of resorbable blasting media (RBM) surface implants and sandblasting with large-grit and acid-etching (SLA) surface implants in the early loading. Methods: This study targeted 123 patients treated by implants installation from January 2008 to March 2010. The loading was initiated in the maxilla within three to four months and in the mandible within one to two months. The types of restoration were single crown and fixed partial prosthesis. Those functioned over one year. The implants were classified by the surface of implants as Group 1: RBM surface (GS III; OSSTEM, Busan, Korea) and, Group 2: SLA surface (Superline; Dentium, Seoul, Korea). The groups were categorized by maxilla and mandible and compared by survival rate, marginal bone loss through clinical records evaluation, and radiographic measurements. Results: The marginal bone loss in the maxilla was $0.14{\pm}0.34mm$ (Group 1) and $0.30{\pm}0.37mm$ (Group 2), a statistically significant difference (P<0.05). In the mandible those were $0.28{\pm}0.54mm$ (Group 1) and $0.20{\pm}0.33mm$ (Group 2), not significant (P>0.05). There was no significant difference of marginal bone loss between maxilla and mandible by groups. During observation there was no implant failure, a survival rate of 100%. Conclusion: Both surfaces showed an excellent survival rate, and the marginal bone loss was not substantial.
Purpose: This study compares the prognosis (the survival rate and marginal bone loss) of resorbable blasting media (RBM) surface implants and sandblasting with large-grit and acid-etching (SLA) surface implants in the early loading. Methods: This study targeted 123 patients treated by implants installation from January 2008 to March 2010. The loading was initiated in the maxilla within three to four months and in the mandible within one to two months. The types of restoration were single crown and fixed partial prosthesis. Those functioned over one year. The implants were classified by the surface of implants as Group 1: RBM surface (GS III; OSSTEM, Busan, Korea) and, Group 2: SLA surface (Superline; Dentium, Seoul, Korea). The groups were categorized by maxilla and mandible and compared by survival rate, marginal bone loss through clinical records evaluation, and radiographic measurements. Results: The marginal bone loss in the maxilla was $0.14{\pm}0.34mm$ (Group 1) and $0.30{\pm}0.37mm$ (Group 2), a statistically significant difference (P<0.05). In the mandible those were $0.28{\pm}0.54mm$ (Group 1) and $0.20{\pm}0.33mm$ (Group 2), not significant (P>0.05). There was no significant difference of marginal bone loss between maxilla and mandible by groups. During observation there was no implant failure, a survival rate of 100%. Conclusion: Both surfaces showed an excellent survival rate, and the marginal bone loss was not substantial.
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제안 방법
Analysis of the medical records and measurements on radiographs, the implant survival rate and the marginal bone loss between the maxilla and the mandible were evaluated along with the implant system.
88 months for the mandible. During the first year post-treatment, exams was performed at three month intervals, then lengthened to six month intervals thereafter.
The marginal bone loss was measured by comparing the marginal bone level around the implant fixture on the periapical radiograph taken at initial implant installation with those of the final follow-up radiograph. For the marginal bone loss, bone height from the implant shoulder to the most distinct radio-opaque area in the mesiodistal alveolar ridge was measured vertically on the radiograph taken by the parallel imaging method and the average was calculated by obtaining the mesiodistal height.
The subjects were divided by implant surface treatment into Group 1: RBM surface (GS III; OSSTEM, Busan, Korea) and Group 2: SLA surface (Superline; Dentium, Seoul, Korea) (Fig. 1). Both the GS III and Superline system were of the internal hex and tapered body type.
This study compared the survival rate and marginal bone loss of the early loading of RBM surface implants and that of SLA surface implants.
대상 데이터
The Superline implants used in this study were of the SLA surface and tapered type. These are designed to be placed in cases with poor bone quality or in cases with a bone graft in the maxillary sinus.
The study included patients who were loaded three to four months after implant placement in the maxilla and one to two months after implant placement in the mandible at the Bundang Seoul National University Dental Clinic from January 2008 to March 2010. The informed consents for this study were explained to the patients before treatment.
데이터처리
The mean bone resorption level of the two groups was compared by Student’s t-test.
The survival rate and success rate of implants for the two groups were compared by the Pearson’s chi-square test.
성능/효과
There was a 100% survival rate of the implants in both groups. For the maxilla, the success rate was 98% for Group 1 and 97% for Group 2. For the mandible, the success rate was 97% in Group 1 and 100% in Group 2 (Table 5), not a significant difference in the survival rate and success rate.
2. The mean age of the subjects for the evaluation of the maxilla was 54.29±12.64 years, and the mean age of the subjects for the evaluation of the mandible was 54.92±13.00 years.
3. In the maxilla, the marginal bone loss around implants was 0.14±0.34 mm in Group 1 and 0.30±0.37 mm in Group 2, and a statistically significant difference between groups was found (P<0.05).
[6] reported the marginal bone loss of fixed prostheses supported by ITI SLA screw type implants and placed within 24 hours in 28 patients with edentulous maxilla. Eight months after function, there was an average marginal bone loss of 3.2mm, and the survival rate was 98%. Nordin et al.
The limitations of this retrospective study are that the deviation of cases in the anterior tooth and posterior tooth was large, the length and diameter of implants were diverse, and the variables of bone mass and bone quality were not considered. Despite such limitations, the early loading protocol, in which the final prosthesis was placed at 3 to 4 months in the maxilla and 1 to 2 months in the mandible, yielded stable clinical outcomes.
[7] reported on SLA Straumann implants of 116 patients that were placed in maxillae and restored with a fixed implant-supported prosthesis within 10 to 14 days. The patients were observed for two to three years, and achieved a 98% success rate. Roccuzzo et al.
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