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Concepts for prevention of complications in implant therapy.

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BORIS DOI
10.7892/boris.137320
Date of Publication
October 2019
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Zahnmedizinische Klin...

Author
Romanos, Georgios E.
Delgado-Ruiz, Rafael
Sculean, Anton
Zahnmedizinische Kliniken, Klinik für Parodontologie
Subject(s)

600 - Technology::610...

Series
Periodontology 2000
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
1600-0757
Publisher
Wiley
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.1111/prd.12278
PubMed ID
31407435
Uncontrolled Keywords

complications dental ...

Description
The use of dental implants is nowadays a well-accepted and highly predictable treatment modality for restoring the dentition and reestablishing the masticatory function of edentulous and partially edentulous patients. Despite the high predictability and excellent long-term survival rates reported for implant therapy, complications may still occur and can jeopardize both short- and long-term success. The present paper provides an overview on the most important aspects related to the etiology, prevention, and management of complications associated with implant therapy. Data from the literature indicate that a number of factors, such as surgical trauma, implant diameter, type of implant-abutment connection, abutment disconnection and reconnection, presence of microgap, and implant malpositioning, can substantially influence the biologic processes of bone remodeling and biofilm formation, thus increasing the rate of short- and long-term hard- and soft-tissue complications. Other factors, such as excess cement at cement-retained prosthetic restorations, abutment mobility, and infections (e.g. peri-implant mucositis and peri-implantitis) caused by bacterial biofilm, are further causes for complications and failures. More recent evidence also indicates that besides the need for sufficient bone volume surrounding the implant, the presence of an adequate width and thickness of attached mucosa may improve biofilm control and limit crestal bone resorption. Furthermore, emerging evidence points also to the pivotal role of human factors as one of the most important causes of complications in implant dentistry. It can be concluded that clinicians need to consider all biologic and biomechanical factors affecting implant placement and survival, as well as undergo adequate training to improve their surgical skills to control and prevent implant complications. Careful patient selection and control of environmental and systemic factors, such as smoking, diabetes etc., coupled with an accurate surgical and prosthetic planning, enable a better prevention and control of infections.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/184835
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Romanos_et_al-2019-Periodontology_2000.pdftextAdobe PDF974.41 KBpublished
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