Management of horizontal tooth fracture followed by immediate implant placement – a case series

2016 ◽  
Vol 36 (3) ◽  
pp. 401-407 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ariádene Pértile de Oliveira Rosa ◽  
José Martins da Rosa ◽  
Luís Pereira ◽  
Carlos Francischone ◽  
Bruno Sotto-Maior

2015 ◽  
Vol 19 (2) ◽  
pp. 113-115
Author(s):  
M. Koray ◽  
I. Ozcan ◽  
B. Alkan ◽  
O. Kesmez ◽  
H. Tanyeri

SUMMARYObjective: The aim of this study was to evaluate the outcome of immediate postextraction implant placement. Immediate placement of dental implants have been claimed of the potential advantages such as reductions in the number of surgical interventions, a shorter treatment time, an ideal 3-dimensional implant positioning, the presumptive preservation of alveolar bone at the site of the tooth extraction and soft tissue aesthetics.Method: In this case series we reported to extract 15 teeth in 12 patients (8 males; 4 females, mean age: 46.08 years) and replace the teeth with implants immediately.Results: There were no signs of inflammation or infection and none of the patients had complaints subsequently. All implants were osseointegrated at the time of abutment connection. Postoperative healing was uneventful in all of the patients. No complications were observed.Conclusion: Within the limits of the present study, immediate implant placement was a predictable treatment.


2020 ◽  
Vol 31 (S20) ◽  
pp. 297-297
Author(s):  
Maria Eleni Oikonomou ◽  
Agamemno Chliaoutakis ◽  
Konstantinos Samanidis ◽  
Anthi Papachristodima ◽  
Georgios Ntagiantis ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 44 (4) ◽  
pp. 281-286
Author(s):  
Young-Dan Cho ◽  
Yang-Jo Seol ◽  
Yong-Moo Lee ◽  
Seong-Joo Heo ◽  
Young Ku

2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Edith Groenendijk ◽  
Ewald Maria Bronkhorst ◽  
Gert Jacobus Meijer

Abstract Background Immediate implant placement (IIP) often is related to mid-buccal recession in literature. To draw conclusions about the behavior of the soft tissues following IIP, pre-operative aesthetic measurements have to be taken into account. The aim of analysis of these prospective clinical case series data was to elucidate whether the pre-operative buccal soft tissue level (STL) or gingival phenotype influence the 1-year pink aesthetic outcome after performing flapless immediate implant placement and provisionalization (FIIPP) maxillary incisor cases. Materials and methods In 97 patients, a maxillary incisor was replaced performing FIIPP. STL and phenotype were analyzed on light-photographs made pre-operatively (T0), direct post-operatively (T1), after placement of the permanent crown (T2), and 1 year post-operatively (T3). To investigate if a pre-operative buccal soft tissue deficiency or excess influenced the total pink esthetic score (total-PES) per patient at T3, PES-3 was modified by adding a minus (“−”) or plus (“+”) in case of a STL-deficiency or excess, respectively. Results Pre-operatively, 40% of the cases showed a mid-buccal recession (STL-deficiency), 19% STL-excess, while in 41% an equal level in comparison with the contra-lateral tooth was observed (STL-neutral). One year post-operatively, 79% (31/39) of the recession cases showed soft tissue gain, while STL-excess cases showed the highest rate of soft tissue reduction (94%; 17/18). This resulted in a decrease of soft tissue recessions and excesses (to 26% and 4%, respectively), and an increase of ideal STL (PES-3-score 2) to 70%. The 1-year aesthetic outcome was not statistically different (p = 0.577) between patients with a pre-operative soft tissue recession (mean T3 total-PES = 12.18) or STL excess (mean T3 total-PES = 11.94). Of the total population, 71 patients with a thin, and 26 with a thick phenotype were evaluated. No statistical difference (p = 0.08) was present in aesthetic outcome between the two phenotypes (thin mean T3 total-PES = 12.30, thick mean T3 total-PES = 11.65). Conclusion Regardless of phenotype, preoperative soft tissue recession, or excess, comparable high aesthetic outcomes were achieved 1 year post-operatively. Trial registration Ethical approval was obtained and registered on 20 October 2015 (NTR5583/NL4170).


2019 ◽  
Vol 30 (3) ◽  
pp. 244-251 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vinicius Fabris ◽  
Vagner Flavio Reginato ◽  
Carolina Smaniotto ◽  
Atais Bacchi ◽  
Rafael Leonardo Xediek Consani

Abstract Severely resorbed mandibles with only cortical bone remaining can fracture during or after implant placement. This case series presents a technique to reduce the risk or the consequences of mandibular fracture. Seven patients with only cortical mandibular bone remaining were treated with the fixation of a titanium plate in the frontal surface previously to implant placement, during the same surgical procedure. Immediate complete-arch implant supported prosthesis were installed. Patient’s systemic and local conditions that could influence implant survival were registered previously to surgery and during the follow up period. Biological and biomechanical complications were recorded. The condition of peri-implant tissues was evaluated. The follow-ups ranged from 12 to 84 months. Twenty-nine implants were placed and no implant failure or other biological complication was observed. The peri-implant tissue evaluation demonstrated most implants was surrounded by keratinized tissue (89.5%). No marginal recession (implant platform cervical to gingival margin) was observed. Probing depth was normal, ranging from 0 to 3 mm. Low scores of plaque index or bleeding on probing were recorded. Biomechanical complications evolved loosening of 4 prosthetic screws and 1 fractured. The use of a titanium plate for the fixation of severely resorbed mandibles with only cortical bone remaining was a safe treatment procedure, avoiding biological and major biomechanical complications in the treatment with immediate complete-arch implant-supported prosthesis.


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