1. Bucco‐palatal implant position and its impact on soft tissue level in the maxillary esthetic zone
- Author
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Rudolf Fürhauser, Lukas Fürhauser, Nikolaus Fürhauser, Veronika Pohl, Bernhard Pommer, and Robert Haas
- Subjects
Dental Implants ,Incisor ,Dental Implants, Single-Tooth ,Crowns ,Maxilla ,Prospective Studies ,Esthetics, Dental ,Oral Surgery - Abstract
The term "buccal implant position" is commonly used but lacks a precise definition and missing a reference point. Considering its major impact on peri-implantitis and esthetic failures the purpose of this study was to find a correlation between bucco-palatal implant positioning and the midfacial soft tissue level of implant crowns using newly defined Emergence-points.Patients with unilateral single-tooth implant crowns in the region of the central or lateral maxillary incisor were included in this study. Digital intraoral scans were superimposed over a scan of the master cast or the original digital data set and analyzed in a computer planning program. In relation to the corresponding natural tooth, an ideal Emergence-point (ESeventy-three patients met the inclusion criteria. AD ranged from 0 to 3.5 mm (AD = 0.87 ± 1.01), SIP from 0.2 to 5.1 mm (AD = 2.66 ± 1.64). Statistical analysis showed a significant inverse correlation between AD and SIP (ρ = -.55, p .001). VIP, the implant inclination, time span since implant insertion, and phenotype revealed no significant correlation to AD.The more palatal the implant was positioned, the less AD was observed. The position of the implant shoulder should preferably be planned more than 2 mm behind the ideal E-point. This E-point can be used for implant planning as it defines the ideal crown length for prospective planning.
- Published
- 2022
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