Complications in Oral Implant Placement

Author(s):  
Peer W. Kämmerer ◽  
Bilal Al-Nawas
2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (8) ◽  
pp. 2322 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stefano Pieralli ◽  
Benedikt Christopher Spies ◽  
Valentin Hromadnik ◽  
Robert Nicic ◽  
Florian Beuer ◽  
...  

3D printed surgical guides are used for prosthetically-driven oral implant placement. When manufacturing these guides, information regarding suitable printing techniques and materials as well as the necessity for additional, non-printed stock parts such as metal sleeves is scarce. The aim of the investigation was to determine the accuracy of a surgical workflow for oral implant placement using guides manufactured by means of fused deposition modeling (FDM) from a biodegradable and sterilizable biopolymer filament. Furthermore, the potential benefit of metal sleeve inserts should be assessed. A surgical guide was designed for the installation of two implants in the region of the second premolar (SP) and second molar (SM) in a mandibular typodont model. For two additive manufacturing techniques (stereolithography [SLA]: reference group, FDM: observational group) n = 10 surgical guides, with (S) and without (NS) metal sleeves, were used. This resulted in 4 groups of 10 samples each (SLA-S/NS, FDM-S/NS). Target and real implant positions were superimposed and compared using a dedicated software. Sagittal, transversal, and vertical discrepancies at the level of the implant shoulder, apex and regarding the main axis were determined. MANOVA with posthoc Tukey tests were performed for statistical analyses. Placed implants showed sagittal and transversal discrepancies of <1 mm, vertical discrepancies of <0.6 mm, and axial deviations of ≤3°. In the vertical dimension, no differences between the four groups were measured (p ≤ 0.054). In the sagittal dimension, SLA groups showed decreased deviations in the implant shoulder region compared to FDM (p ≤ 0.033), whereas no differences in the transversal dimension between the groups were measured (p ≤ 0.054). The use of metal sleeves did not affect axial, vertical, and sagittal accuracy, but resulted in increased transversal deviations (p = 0.001). Regarding accuracy, biopolymer-based surgical guides manufactured by means of FDM present similar accuracy than SLA. Cytotoxicity tests are necessary to confirm their biocompatibility in the oral environment.


Author(s):  
Suzanne N. Verma ◽  
Sterling R. Schow ◽  
Brian H. Stone ◽  
R. Gilbert Triplett

Author(s):  
Erza Mulaj ◽  
Berat Lenjani ◽  
Shqiponje Gashi ◽  
Ilirian Lenjani

This presentation, based on various studies and our experiences, aims to highlight the paraprothetic and prosthetic protocol in oral implantlogy. The purpose of this paper is to perform prosthetic simulation prior to any surgical-implant procedure, as oral implant logy arises as a consequence and in response to prosthetics in cases of partial or total insufficiency. By comparing the clinical efficacy of the early and late protocol of dental implant placement according to the protocol. The objectives of this paper are to determine the position, diameter, and number of implants determined by the therapeutic angle that present cases with insufficiency and then indicate the need for prosthetic (suprastructural) work depending on the anatomical considerations of the jaw. Planned prosthetic work may have to vary depending on the appropriate jaw implant position. What needs to be emphasized is proper diagnosis and prosthetic treatment / planning as well as surgical stages.


2015 ◽  
Vol 20 (2) ◽  
pp. 73-83 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Temmerman ◽  
M. Meeus ◽  
R. Dhondt ◽  
E. Wierinck ◽  
W. Teughels ◽  
...  

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