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A 5-year prospective clinical study of submerged and nonsubmerged Paragon system implants in the edentulous mandible
Department of Prosthetic Dentistry, Postgraduate Dental Education Center, Örebro, Sweden.ORCID iD: 0000-0001-9240-5053
Department of Prosthetic Dentistry, Public Dental Health Service, Uppsala, Sweden.
Department of Prosthodontics, Faculty of Dentistry, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway.
Department of Surgical Sciences, Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, Medical Faculty Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden.
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2010 (English)In: International Journal of Prosthodontics, ISSN 0893-2174, E-ISSN 1139-9791, Vol. 23, no 3, p. 231-238Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

Purpose: The aim of this investigation was to evaluate the clinical outcome of two different surgical protocols in the edentulous mandible: submerged and nonsubmerged. Further, the Paragon dental implant with a titanium plasma-sprayed surface was evaluated.

Materials and methods: Twenty-nine consecutively treated patients with 168 implants supporting fixed prostheses were included. All but 3 patients were provided 6 implants, placed via nonsubmerged healing on one side and submerged healing on the other. Data were collected from patient records and radiographs. Twenty-four patients participated in the 5-year clinical follow-up examination.

Results: After 5 years, all patients still had their mandibular fixed prostheses in function. Cumulative survival rates were 100% for prostheses and 99.4% for implants. However, 3 implants fractured in 1 patient. One submerged implant was lost before loading but no further implants were lost during follow-up. The radiographic bone loss was small for all implants with a mean of 0.14 mm (standard deviation [SD]: 0.37) at 1 year and 0.42 mm (SD: 0.48) at 5 years for nonsubmerged implants and 0.17 mm (SD: 0.32) at 1 year and 0.51 mm (SD: 0.33) at 5 years for submerged implants. Nineteen implants (including the 3 that fractured) presented annual bone loss exceeding 0.2 mm after the first year, yielding a cumulative success rate of 86.2% after 5 years.

Conclusion: Single-stage surgery was shown to have the same predictability as two-stage surgery in the anterior edentulous mandible. Paragon implants with a titanium plasma-sprayed surface showed a fracture rate of 2.2% and a success rate of 86.2% after 5 years.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Quintessence Publishing , 2010. Vol. 23, no 3, p. 231-238
National Category
Dentistry
Research subject
Medicine
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:oru:diva-114515ISI: 000278617200008PubMedID: 20552088Scopus ID: 2-s2.0-77955888447OAI: oai:DiVA.org:oru-114515DiVA, id: diva2:1880076
Funder
Region Örebro CountyAvailable from: 2024-06-30 Created: 2024-06-30 Last updated: 2024-07-01Bibliographically approved
In thesis
1. On the role of number of fixtures, surgical technique and timing of loading.
Open this publication in new window or tab >>On the role of number of fixtures, surgical technique and timing of loading.
2008 (English)Doctoral thesis, comprehensive summary (Other academic)
Abstract [en]

Aims: The aims of this thesis were to analyze reduced number of implants supporting full arch fixed mandibular prostheses and fixed partial dentures (FPDs), non-submerged healing and early loading in the edentulous mandible. A further aim was to evaluate fit of Computer Numerical Controlled (CNC) milled I-Bridge frameworks.

Material & methods: Paper I. One hundred and nineteen patients rehabilitated with full arch mandibular prostheses supported by four implants were evaluated after a mean follow-up of 4.4 years. Paper II. A total of 178 patients provided with FPDs supported by two (n=92) or three implants (n=122) of whom 123 were evaluated after a mean follow-up of 9.4 years. Paper III. Early and delayed loading of full arch mandibular prostheses were evaluated in 109 patients, 54 with delayed loading and 55 with early loading, with a mean follow-up of 3.6 years. Paper IV. Submerged and non-submerged implant placement for supporting fixed prostheses in the edentulous mandible were evaluated after five years in 29 patients. Paper V. The precision of fit of CNC-milled I-Bridge frameworks was evaluated using two different implant systems.

Results: Paper I. The five-year cumulative survival rate (CSR) for implants was 99.1% and for prostheses 100%. Mean bone loss from baseline to five-year follow-up was 0.5 mm. No indication could be found that the number of supporting implants influenced the prosthetic complications. Paper II. The five-year implant and prosthesis CSR was 97.7% for two-implant supported FPDs and 97.3% for three-implant supported FPDs. Mean bone loss at five years was 0.4 mm. Significantly more prosthetic and abutment screw loosening were seen in two-implant supported FPDs. Paper III. Five-year CSR for implants was 94.4% and 92.5% for prostheses in early loading, and 97.9% and 98.0% in the delayed loading group. More prostheses needed adjustment or replacement in the early group, but patients treated with early loading were more pleased with the treatment procedure. Paper IV. Five-year CSR survival rate was 99.4%. Three implants fractured in one patient. Mean bone loss at five years was 0.7 mm in submerged implants and 0.5 mm in non-submerged implants. Paper V. All frameworks demonstrated clinically acceptable fit with mean distortion values within 23 microm (x-axis), 26 microm (y), 4 microm (z- axis) and 34 microm (3-D) for all frameworks. Control frameworks displayed greater levels of distortion than frameworks produced in a strict test situation.

Conclusion: A reduction of the number of supporting implants to four implants in full arch mandibular prostheses and two implants in three unit FPDs in partial edentulous jaws resulted in the same clinical outcome as when more implants are used. Non-submerged implant placement in the edentulous mandible was as predictable as submerged, but early loading of implant-supported mandibular prostheses incurred more prosthetic complications. Computer numerical controlled milled frameworks presented levels of precision of fit within limits considered to be clinically acceptable and superior to earlier published results on cast frameworks.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Göteborgs universitet, 2008. p. 95
Series
Swedish Dental Journal Supplement, ISSN 0348-6672 ; 197
National Category
Dentistry
Research subject
Medicine
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:oru:diva-114519 (URN)9789162874674 (ISBN)
Public defence
(Swedish)
Opponent
Supervisors
Available from: 2024-07-01 Created: 2024-06-30 Last updated: 2024-07-01Bibliographically approved

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