Rubrik(en): Implantology
Sprache(n): English
Publikationsjahr: 2009
Video-Quelle: 60 Jahre Quintessenz
Content
Oral implants succeed quite well even if results from
many clinical studies using the so called simple CSRcurve
overestimate the true clinical outcome; many
implant problems may remain undetected in this type
of reporting. The four-field table or a more stringent
CSR reporting, both techniques including data on
bone loss and unaccounted for implants, would be far
better approaches to report clinical results than the
simple CSR curve that lamentably is dominating clinical
reporting today. Furthermore, there are recent reports
that may be interpreted as if oral implants are threatened
by peri-implantitis in a great proportion of cases,
had this been correct it would have threatened the
clinical longevity of our procedures. However, when
carefully scrutinized, the evidence for primary periimplantitis
builds on findings from ligature studies of
very little clinical significance, in reality the healing
adaptation theory explains undue bone loss much
more reliably than any peri-implantitis theory. The
healing/adaptation theory, recently published by
Chvartszaid, Koka & Zarb in a quintessence book,
explains early failures/bone loss by compromised healing
that may occur as result of some biologic malfunction
or delay or as a result of harshness of a surgical
intervention; it further explains postloading
failures/bone loss to be due to inability of the host to
adapt to the challenges placed on the implant interface,
not uncommonly due to a synergy from a multitude
of factors. Having said this, if primary periimplantitis
in reality is a most rare, if at all existing,
single condition behind implant bone loss, a late result
of bone loss for other reasons, may naturally be termed
secondary peri-implantitis since the implant interface
may then be characterized by inflammation or even
infection.