4毫米长与更长的植入物用于萎缩后颌骨的增强型骨:一项多中心随机对照试验加载后1年的结果

Q1 Dentistry European Journal of Oral Implantology Pub Date : 2018-01-01
Caroline Bolle, Pietro Felice, Carlo Barausse, Valeria Pistilli, Anna Trullenque-Eriksson, Marco Esposito
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:评价4.0 mm短牙种植体是否可以替代上颌异种照相增强术和在萎缩后颌骨放置至少10.0 mm长的种植体。材料和方法:40例下颌骨萎缩(前磨牙和磨牙区)患者,下颌骨管以上骨高度5.0 mm至6.0 mm,上颌窦以下4.0 mm至5.0 mm,根据平行组设计随机分组,在两个中心接受1至3个4.0 mm长的种植体或1至3个至少10.0 mm长的增强骨种植体。所有种植体的直径均为4.0 mm或4.5 mm。下颌骨用马骨块和可吸收屏障垂直增强。植入物在植骨4个月后放置。上颌窦通过覆盖可吸收屏障的侧窗用颗粒状猪骨增强,同时放置种植体。种植体不浸入水中,并在4个月后加载,临时螺钉保留的增强丙烯酸修复体在4个月后替换为最终螺钉保留的金属复合假体。患者随访至加载后1年。结果测量是:假体和种植体失败,任何并发症,种植体周围边缘骨水平改变。结果:3例患者退出;一个来自上颌增长组,一个来自下颌骨增长组,一个来自上颌短种植体组。在6例(30%)扩增下颌骨中,不可能放置至少10.0 mm的种植体,因此放置较短的种植体。在下颌骨,加长组的1个种植体失败,而短种植体组的2个患者有2个4.0 mm种植体失败。在上颌,2例患者3个短种植体失败,4例患者7个长种植体(2个长种植体和1个短种植体落入上颌窦)。2个短种植体(1个下颌骨和1个上颌)由于种植体失败而在后期放置,而6个种植体(1个下颌骨和5个上颌)在增加的地方(1个下颌假体未交付,3个上颌假体延迟交付,1个未交付,1个失败)。特别地,增强组中有3例患者(1个下颌骨和2个上颌)没有佩戴假体。两组间种植失败的差异无统计学意义(P(卡方检验)= 0.693;比例差= 0.03;CI 95% -0.11 ~ 0.17)或假体失败(P(卡方检验)= 0.126;比例差= 0.10;CI 95% -0.03至0.24)。在下颌骨部位,9例加长种植体患者出现并发症,2例短种植体患者出现并发症(P(卡方检验)= 0.01;比例差= 0.37;CI 95% 0.11 ~ 0.63),差异有统计学意义。上颌部无显著差异:9例鼻窦提升患者与4例短段种植患者出现并发症(P(卡方检验)= 0.091;比例差= 0.25;CI 95% -0.03至0.53)。在装填后1年,长4mm的下颌种植体平均种植周骨损失为0.51 mm,长10mm或更长的下颌种植体为0.77 mm,短上颌种植体为0.63 mm,长上颌种植体为0.72 mm。下颌骨差异有统计学意义(平均差异为-0.26 mm, 95% CI为-0.39 ~ -0.13,P (ANCOVA) < 0.001),上颌差异无统计学意义(平均差异为-0.09 mm, 95% CI为-0.24 ~ 0.05,P (ANCOVA) = 0.196)。结论:在植入4.0 mm长的种植体一年后,与长种植体相比,在增强颌中植入4.0 mm长的种植体的效果相似,甚至更好,但并发症较少。短的植入物可能是比骨增强术更好的选择,特别是在下颌骨,因为治疗侵入性更小,更快,更便宜,而且发病率更低。然而,在提出可靠的建议之前,需要5至10年的加载后数据。
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4 mm long vs longer implants in augmented bone in posterior atrophic jaws: 1-year post-loading results from a multicentre randomised controlled trial.

Purpose: To evaluate whether 4.0 mm short dental implants could be an alternative to augmentation with xenographs in the maxilla and placement of at least 10.0 mm long implants in posterior atrophic jaws.

Materials and methods: A group of 40 patients with atrophic posterior (premolar and molar areas) mandibles with 5.0 mm to 6.0 mm bone height above the mandibular canal and 40 patients with atrophic maxillas having 4.0 mm to 5.0 mm below the maxillary sinus, were randomised according to a parallel group design to receive between one and three 4.0 mm long implants or one to three implants of at least 10.0 mm long in augmented bone, at two centres. All implants had a diameter of 4.0 mm or 4.5 mm. Mandibles were vertically augmented with inter-positional equine bone blocks and resorbable barriers. Implants were placed 4 months after the inter-positional grafting. Maxillary sinuses were augmented with particulated porcine bone via a lateral window covered with resorbable barriers, and implants were placed simultaneously. Implants were not submerged and were loaded after 4 months with provisional screw-retained reinforced acrylic restorations replaced after another 4 months by definitive screw-retained metal-composite prostheses. Patients were followed up to 1 year post-loading. Outcome measures were: prosthesis and implant failures, any complication, and peri-implant marginal bone level changes.

Results: Three patients dropped out; one from the maxillary augmented group, one from the mandibular augmented group, and one from the maxillary short implant group. In six augmented mandibles (30%) it was not possible to place implants of at least 10.0 mm, so shorter implants were placed instead. In mandibles, one implant from the augmented group failed vs two 4.0 mm implants in two patients from the short implant group. In maxillae, three short implants failed in two patients vs seven long implants in four patients (two long implants and one short implant dropped into the maxillary sinus). Two prostheses on short implants (one mandibular and one maxillary) were placed at a later stage because of implant failures, vs six prostheses (one mandibular and five maxillary) at augmented sites (one mandibular prosthesis not delivered, three maxillary prostheses delivered with delays, one not delivered, and one failed) at augmented sites. In particular, three patients in the augmented group (one mandible and two maxillae) were not wearing a prosthesis. There were no statistically significant differences in implant failures (P (chi-square test) = 0.693; difference in proportion = 0.03; CI 95% -0.11 to 0.17) or prostheses failures (P (chi-square test) = 0.126; difference in proportion = 0.10; CI 95% -0.03 to 0.24). At mandibular sites, nine augmented patients were affected by complications vs two patients treated with short implants (P (chi-square test) = 0.01; difference in proportion = 0.37; CI 95% 0.11 to 0.63), the difference being statistically significant. No significant differences were found for maxillae: nine sinus-lifted patients vs four short implant patients were affected by complications (P (chi-square test) = 0.091; difference in proportion = 0.25; CI 95% -0.03 to 0.53). At 1-year post-loading, average peri-implant bone loss was 0.51 mm at 4 mm long mandibular implants, 0.77 mm at 10 mm or longer mandibular implants, 0.63 mm at short maxillary implants and 0.72 mm at long maxillary implants. The difference was statistically significant in mandibles (mean difference -0.26 mm, 95% CI -0.39 to -0.13, P (ANCOVA) < 0.001), but not in maxillae (mean difference -0.09 mm, 95% CI -0.24 to 0.05, P (ANCOVA) = 0.196).

Conclusions: One year after loading 4.0 mm long implants achieved similar results, if not better, than longer implants in augmented jaws, but were affected by fewer complications. Short implants might be a preferable choice over bone augmentation, especially in mandibles, since the treatment is less invasive, faster, cheaper, and associated with less morbidity. However, 5 to 10 years post-loading data are necessary before making reliable recommendations.

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来源期刊
European Journal of Oral Implantology
European Journal of Oral Implantology DENTISTRY, ORAL SURGERY & MEDICINE-
CiteScore
2.35
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊最新文献
Immediate loading of fixed prostheses in fully edentulous jaws - 1-year follow-up from a single-cohort retrospective study. Research in focus. Dental implants with internal versus external connections: 1-year post-loading results from a pragmatic multicenter randomised controlled trial. Research in focus. Immediate, early (6 weeks) and delayed loading (3 months) of single, partial and full fixed implant supported prostheses: 1-year post-loading data from a multicentre randomised controlled trial.
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