Dental
implant
A dental implant is an artificial tooth root replacement
and is used in prosthetic dentist. There are several
types. The most widely accepted and successful is
the osseointegrated dental implant, based on the
discovery by Swedish Professor Per-Ingvar Br?nemark
that titanium could be successfully incorporated
into bone when osteoblasts grow on and into the
rough surface of the dental implanted titanium.
This forms a structural and functional connection
between the living bone and the dental implant.
A variation on the dental implant procedure is the
dental implant-supported bridge, or dental implant-supported
denture. History – Dental
Implant
The Mayan civilization has been shown to have
used the earliest known examples of endosseous
dental implants (dental implants embedded into
bone), dating back over 1,350 years before the
famous Per Br?nemark started working with titanium.
Whilst excavating Mayan burial sites in Honduras
in 1931 archaeologists found a fragment of mandible
of Mayan origin, dating from about 600 AD. This
mandible, which is considered to be that of a
woman in her twenties, had three tooth shaped
pieces of shell placed into the sockets of three
missing lower incisor teeth. For forty years the
archaeological world considered that these shells
were placed after death in a manner also observed
in the ancient Egyptians. However in 1970 a Brazilian
dental academic, Professor Amadeo Bobbio studied
the mandibular specimen and took a series of radiographs.
He noted compact bone formation around two of
the dental implants which led him to conclude
that the dental implants were placed during life.
In the 1950s research was being conducted at Cambridge
University in England to study blood flow in vivo.
These workers devised a method of constructing
a chamber of titanium which was then embedded
into the soft tissue of the ears of rabbits. In
1952 the Swedish orthopaedic surgeon, P I Br?nemark,
was interested in studying bone healing and regeneration,
and adopted the Cambridge designed ‘rabbit ear
chamber’ for use in the rabbit femur. Following
several months of study he attempted to retrieve
these expensive chambers from the rabbits and
found that he was unable to remove them. Per Br?nemark
observed that bone had grown into such close approximity
with the titanium that it effectively adhered
to the metal. Br?nemark carried out many further
studies into this phenomenon, using both animal
and human subjects, which all confirmed this unique
property of titanium.
Although he had originally considered that the
first work should centre on knee and hip surgery,
Br?nemark finally decided that the mouth was more
accessible for continued clinical observations
and the high rate of edentulism in the general
population offered more subjects for widespread
study. He termed the clinically observed adherence
of bone with titanium as ‘osseointegration’. In
1965 Br?nemark, who was by then the Professor
of Anatomy at Gothenburg University in Sweden,
placed the first titanium dental implant into
a human volunteer who was a Swede named G?sta
Larrson.
Over the next fourteen years Br?nemark published
many studies on the use of titanium in dental
implantology until in 1978 he entered into a commercial
partnership with the Swedish defence company,
Bofors AB for the development and marketing of
his dental implants. With Bofors (later to become
Nobel Industries) as the parent company, Nobelpharma
AB (later to be renamed Nobel Biocare) was founded
in 1981 to focus on dental implantology. To the
present day over 7 million Br?nemark System dental
implants have now been placed and hundreds of
other companies produce dental implants.
Procedure – Dental Implant
A typical dental implant consists of a titanium
screw, with a roughened surface. This surface
is treated either by plasma spraying, etching
or sandblasting to increase the integration potential
of the dental implant. At edentulous (without
teeth) jaw sites, a pilot hole is bored into the
recipient bone, taking care to avoid vital structures
(in particular the inferior alveolar nerve within
the mandible).
This pilot hole is then expanded by using progressively
wider drills. Care is taken not to damage the
osteoblast cells by overheating. A cooling saline
spray keeps the temperature of the bone to below
47 degrees Celsius (approximately 117 degrees
Fahrenheit). The dental implant screw can be self-tapping,
and is screwed into place at a precise torque
so as not to overload the surrounding bone. Once
in the bone, a cover screw is placed and the operation
site is allowed to heal for a few months for integration
to occur.
After some months the dental implant is uncovered
and a healing abutment and temporary crown is
placed onto the dental implant. This encourages
the gum to grow in the right scalloped shape to
approximate a natural tooth's gums and allows
assessment of the final aesthetics of the restored
tooth. Once this has occurred a permanent crown
will be constructed and placed on the dental implant.
An increasingly common strategy to preserve bone
and reduce treatment times includes the placement
of a dental implant into a recent extraction site.
In addition, immediate loading is becoming more
common as success rates for this procedure are
now acceptable. This can cut months off the treatment
time and in some cases a prosthetic tooth can
be attached to the dental implants at the same
time as the surgery to place the dental implants.
Complementary procedures
– Dental Implant
Sinus lifting is a common surgical intervention
nowadays. The oral surgeon thickens the adequate
part of atrophic maxilla towards the sinus with
the help of bone transplantation or bone expletive
substance and as a result enables the dental implantation.
Bone replacement will be necessary in case of
lack of adequately thick bone, which could hold
the dental implant. Substances used during the
process of bone replacement can be the own bone
of the patient (auto transplantation) or artificially
produced bone expletive substance. The intervention
can be carried out in the maxilla and mandible
as well.
Considerations – Dental Implant
For dental implant procedure to work, there must
be enough bone in the jaw, and the bone has to
be strong enough to hold and support the dental
implant. If there is not enough bone, more may
need to be added with a procedure called bone
augmentation. In addition, natural teeth and supporting
tissues near where the dental implant will be
placed must be in good health.
In all cases, what must be addressed is the functional
aspect of the final dental implant restoration,
the final occlusion. How much force per area is
being placed on the bone dental implant interface?
Dental implant loads from chewing and parafunction
can exceed the physio biomechanic tolerance of
the dental implant bone interface and/or the titanium
material itself, causing failure. This can be
failure of the dental implant itself (fracture)
or bone loss, a "melting" of the surrounding
bone.
The restorative dentist must first determine what
type of prosthesis will be fabricated. Only then
can the specific dental implant requirements including
number, length, diameter, and thread pattern be
determined. In other words, the case must be reversed
engineered by the restoring dentist prior to the
surgery. If bone volume or density is inadequate,
a bone graft procedure must be considered first.
Computer simulation software based on CAT scan
data allows virtual dental implant surgical placement
based on a barium impregnated prototype of the
final prosthesis. This predicts vital anatomy,
bone quality, dental implant characteristics,
the need for bone grafting, and maximizing the
dental implant bone surface area for the treatment
case creating a high level of predictability.
Computer CAD/CAM milled or stereo lithography
based drill guides can be developed for the dental
implant surgeon to facilitate proper dental implant
placement based on the final prosthesis occlusion
and aesthetics.
Success rates – Dental Implant
Dental implant success is related to operator
skill, quality and quantity of the bone available
at the site, and also to the patient's oral hygiene.
Various studies have found the 5 year success
rate of dental implants to be between 75-95%.
Patients who smoke experience significantly poorer
success rates.
Failure – Dental Implant
Failure of a dental implant is usually related
to failure to osseointegrate correctly. A dental
implant is considered to be a failure if it is
lost, mobile or shows peri-dental implant bone
loss of greater than one mm in the first year
after dental implanting and greater than 0.2mm
a year after that. Dental implants are not susceptible
to dental caries but they can develop a periodontal
condition called peri-dental implantitis where
correct oral hygiene routines have not been followed.
Risk of failure is increased in smokers. For this
reason dental implants are frequently placed only
after a patient has stopped smoking as the treatment
is very expensive. More rarely, an dental implant
may fail because of poor positioning at the time
of surgery, or may be overloaded initially causing
failure to integrate.
Contraindications – Dental Implant
There are no absolute contraindications to dental
implant dentist, however there are some systemic,
behavioral and anatomic considerations that should
be considered.
Particularly for mandibular (lower jaw) dental
implants, especially in the vicinity of the mental
foramen (MF), there must be sufficient alveolar
bone above the inferior alveolar canal or IAC
(which acts as the conduit for the neurovascular
bundle carrying the inferior alveolar nerve or
IAN). The standard of care for mandibular dental
implants calls for 3D or cone beam X-ray imaging
(computer assisted tomography) because 3D enables
precise measurements to 0.1mm by the dental implantologist,
followed by precision treatment planning with
surgical guides. Patients should be referred to
an appropriate cone beam imaging center if 3D
is not available in the dental implantologist's
practice.
Failure to precisely locate the IAN and MF invites
surgical insult by the drills and the dental implant
itself. Such insult may cause irreparable damage
to the nerve, often felt as a paresthesia (numbness)
or dysesthesia (painful numbness) of the gum,
lip and chin. This condition may persist for life.
Uncontrolled type II diabetes is a significant
relative contraindication as healing following
any type of surgical procedure is delayed due
to poor peripheral blood circulation. Anatomic
considerations include the volume and height of
bone available. Often an ancillary procedure known
as a block graft or sinus augmentation are needed
to provide enough bone for successful dental implant
placement.
There is new information about bisphosphonates
(taken for osteoporosis and certain forms of breast
cancer) which put patients at a higher risk of
developing a delayed healing syndrome called osteonecrosis.
Dental implants may be contraindicated in patients
who take this class of drug.[citation needed
Bruxism (tooth clenching or grinding) is another
contraindication. The forces generated during
bruxism are particularly detrimental to dental
implants while bone is healing; micromovements
in the dental implant positioning are associated
with increased rates of dental implant failure.
Bruxism continues to pose a threat to dental implants
throughout the life of the recipient. Natural
teeth contain a periodontal ligament allowing
each tooth to move and absorb shock in response
to vertical and horizontal forces. Once replaced
by dental implants, this ligament is lost and
teeth are immovably anchored directly into the
jaw bone. This problem can be minimized by wearing
a custom made mouthguard (such an NTI appliance)
at night.
The market – Dental Implant
There are over 100 dental implant companies available
on the U.S. market. Notable companies include
BioHorizons, Nobel Biocare, Straumann, Osteo-Ti,
3i, Zimmer, Astra Tech, Ankylos, Dental implant
Direct, Intra-Lock, Lifecore, and Bio-Lok.
Specialists such as oral and maxillofacial surgeons
and periodontists play a role in the placement
of dental implant fixtures, however these procedures
are not beyond the scope of general dentists or
prosthodontists. Regardless of who places the
dental implant, it is most appropriate for either
a prosthodontist or general dentist to initiate
and coordinate dental implant service, since they
can best assess the merits of this treatment against
other prosthetic options.
Cost – Dental Implant
The price of dental implants varies greatly between
countries. In the United Kingdom, a single tooth
dental implant generally costs around ?2000. Similarly,
in the United States, dental implants average
around $2500, in addition to the cost of the crown.
The cost of full mouth reconstructions with dental
implants begin around $12000 per arch, and can
approach $50000, depending on the complexity of
the case. In Israel, single dental implants begin
around 5000 NIS, comparable to Turkey, where they
begin around $800. Dental implants performed in
Colombia cost around $2000
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