Implant Survival to 36 Months as Related to Length and Diameter

Sheldon Winkler, Harold F. Morris, Shigeru Ochi
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引用次数: 256

Abstract

Background: It is generally accepted that diameter and length of an endosseous dental implant and its stability at placement are critical factors in achieving and maintaining osseointegration. In the event of slight implant mobility at placement, the conventional or accepted treatment is to place a longer implant and/or one of wider diameter. This manuscript presents stability and survival/failure data for implants of different diameters and lengths following 36 months post-placement, as well as crestal bone loss data between placement and uncovering.

Methods: A subset of the Dental Implant Clinical Research Group's database was used to study the 3- year survival and stability of various implant lengths (7 mm, 8 mm, 10 mm, 13 mm, and 16 mm) and diameters (3 mm+ and 4 mm+). Placement to uncovering crestal bone loss was also determined. The implants were generally representative of those available for clinical use (screws, basket, grooved, hydroxy-apatitecoated, CP-Ti, Ti-alloy). The study protocol specified that the implants be randomized to various jaw regions to accomplish the primary goals of the study—the comparison of each implant design's overall survival. A total of 2,917 implants were placed, restored, and followed. Data for all 3 mm to 3.9 mm diameter implants were pooled into a “3+” group, and the 4 mm to 4.9 mm diameter implants into a “4+” mm group. No attempt was made to look at the influence of any other variables on survival outcomes. The possible influence of clustering on survival was taken into consideration.

Results: The 3+ mm group had a mean stability (PTV) of −3.8 (SD = 2.9), and the 4+ group had a mean PTV of −4.4 (SD = 2.7) (P <0.05). The PTVs for implant lengths ranged from −2.9 (SD = 2.8) for 7 mm lengths to −3.9 (SD = 2.9) for 16 mm lengths (P <0.05). Survival to 36 months was 90.7% for the 3+ diameter and 94.6% for the 4+ group (P = 0.01). Survival ranged from 66.7% for the 7 mm implants to 96.4% for 16 mm implants (P = 0.001). Outcomes did not change when clustering was considered, although the P value decreased slightly.

Conclusions: The results indicate that: 1) shorter implants had statistically lower survival rates as compared with longer implants; 2) 3+ mm diameter implants had a lower survival rate as compared with 4+ mm implants; 3) 3+ mm diameter implants are less stable (more positive PTVs) than 4+ mm implants; and 4) there was no significant difference in crestal bone loss for the two different implant diameters between placement and uncovering.Ann Periodontol 2000;5:22-31.

种植体存活至36个月与长度和直径相关
背景:人们普遍认为种植体的直径和长度以及种植体的稳定性是实现和维持骨整合的关键因素。如果种植体在放置时出现轻微的活动,常规或公认的治疗方法是放置更长的种植体和/或直径更宽的种植体。本文介绍了不同直径和长度种植体放置后36个月的稳定性和存活/失败数据,以及放置和揭骨之间的嵴骨丢失数据。方法:使用牙科种植体临床研究小组数据库的一个子集来研究不同种植体长度(7mm, 8mm, 10mm, 13mm和16mm)和直径(3mm +和4mm +)的3年生存和稳定性。还确定了揭露牙冠骨质流失的位置。这些植入物通常具有临床应用的代表性(螺钉、篮状、槽状、羟基磷灰石涂层、CP-Ti、钛合金)。研究方案规定,种植体被随机分配到不同的颌骨区域,以实现研究的主要目标——比较每种种植体设计的总体存活率。总共有2917个种植体被放置、修复并随访。所有直径为3mm至3.9 mm的种植体数据被合并为“3+”组,直径为4mm至4.9 mm的种植体被合并为“4+”mm组。没有尝试去观察任何其他变量对生存结果的影响。考虑了聚类对生存可能产生的影响。结果:3+ mm组平均PTV为- 3.8 (SD = 2.9), 4+ mm组平均PTV为- 4.4 (SD = 2.7) (P <0.05)。种植体长度的PTVs范围从- 2.9 (SD = 2.8)到- 3.9 (SD = 2.9),长度为7mm (P <0.05)。3+径组至36个月生存率为90.7%,4+径组为94.6% (P = 0.01)。生存率从7mm种植体的66.7%到16mm种植体的96.4%不等(P = 0.001)。当考虑聚类时,结果没有变化,尽管P值略有下降。结论:结果表明:1)较短种植体与较长种植体相比,具有统计学上较低的生存率;2) 3+ mm种植体的成活率低于4+ mm种植体;3)直径为3+ mm的种植体比直径为4+ mm的种植体更不稳定(PTVs阳性);4)两种种植体直径的牙冠骨丢失在放置和揭盖过程中无显著差异。Ann periodontotol 2000;5:22-31。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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