PubMed-ID: 19885416Seiten: 734-739, Sprache: EnglischDegidi, Marco / Piattelli, Adriano / Shibli, Jamil Awad / Perrotti, Vittoria / Iezzi, GiovannaHuman biopsy of immediately loaded implants is the most definitive means to determine the occurrence of osseointegration. This case report discusses the histologic and histomorphometric analysis of the bone-titanium interface in immediately restored implants with and without occlusal contact, retrieved after a healing period of 5 weeks. The two implants had been inserted in the posterior mandible; both were freestanding. One implant had been put into functional loading (in occlusal contact) with a fixed provisional prosthesis on the day of implant surgery (implant A), whereas the other implant was restored without occlusal contact (implant B). Both implants were retrieved with a 5-mm trephine after 5 weeks. Before retrieval, both implants appeared to be clinically osseointegrated, and no mobility was present. Both implants were surrounded by newly formed bone lamellae. In both implants about 0.5 to 1 mm of pre-existing and newly formed bone was found coronal to the implant shoulder, with no resorption of the pre-existing coronal bone. The bone-implant contact percentage in implant A was 51.2% ± 4.5%, whereas in implant B it was 55.1% ± 2.3%. Within the limitations of this study, the histologic findings indicated that no differences were found in the histologic response around immediately restored implants with and without occlusal contact.
Schlagwörter: histology, immediate loading, immediate provisionalization, implant surfaces, loading conditions, occlusal loading, retrieved dental implants