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Immediate Postextraction Single-Tooth Implants and Provisional Crowns in the Esthetic Area: 2-year Results of a Cohort Prospective Multicenter Study- Patient-Centered Outcomes
- Source :
- The International journal of oralmaxillofacial implants. 35(4)
- Publication Year :
- 2020
-
Abstract
- PURPOSE A prospective cohort multicenter study was undertaken to identify risk factors for implant survival, complications, and patient-centered outcomes following single-tooth immediate implant placement and loading in esthetic areas. MATERIALS AND METHODS Consecutive immediate implants placed in incisors, canines, and premolar sites were included. Variables recorded as possible risk factors included smoking habit, systemic conditions or therapies, previous assumption of bisphosphonates, inability to take amoxicillin, untreated periodontitis, thin periodontium, parafunctional habits, suppuration, bone dehiscences, and buccal bone fracture during implant insertion. Outcome variables included implant survival, recession, other complications, and patient satisfaction. RESULTS Data of 215 implants in 215 patients were collected in 15 centers in 2 years. One implant was seated with a torque < 30 Ncm and was not immediately loaded. It was successfully loaded 10 weeks after placement and was healthy 2 years later. This implant was excluded from subsequent analysis. Potential risk factors were identified in 116 patients (54.21%). There were 11 dropouts after 1 year and 37 after 2 years. Failures were relatively frequent (14.6%) before the delivery of the definitive prosthesis. No significant association was observed between early failures and risk factors. One failure and six recessions were observed after the definitive prosthesis. High satisfaction scores (mean score of 9.47/10 and 9.55/10 for esthetics and function, respectively) were recorded at 2 years. No recession occurred in the no-risk group. Five mucositis cases and one peri-implantitis case were observed in the 2-year follow-up. CONCLUSION Failures were frequent before the definitive restoration and could not be explained by specific risk factors. Tissues appeared stable after the definitive restoration. Patients were very satisfied during the follow-up.
- Subjects :
- Immediate Dental Implant Loading
medicine.medical_treatment
Alveolar Bone Loss
Dentistry
Esthetics, Dental
Prosthesis
Patient satisfaction
Dental Implants, Single-Tooth
Patient-Centered Care
medicine
Humans
Dental Restoration Failure
Prospective Studies
Prospective cohort study
Periodontitis
Crowns
business.industry
Patient-centered outcomes
Dental Implantation, Endosseous
General Medicine
Bone fracture
medicine.disease
Treatment Outcome
Cohort
Implant
Dental Prosthesis, Implant-Supported
Oral Surgery
business
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 19424434
- Volume :
- 35
- Issue :
- 4
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- The International journal of oralmaxillofacial implants
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....bb0776f65391bc71d37cadbf73ba39bc