articleJournal Of Clinical PeriodontologyMay 9, 2005Closed access

Ridge alterations following implant placement in fresh extraction sockets: an experimental study in the dog

Universidade Estadual de Maringá · University of Gothenburg

PubMed
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Abstract

Objective

To study dimensional alterations of the alveolar ridge that occurred following implant placement in fresh extraction sockets. MATERIAL AND METHODS: Five beagle dogs were included in the study. In both quadrants of the mandible, incisions were made in the crevice region of the third and fourth pre-molars. Buccal and minute lingual full-thickness flaps were elevated. The mesial root of the four pre-molars root was filled and the teeth were hemi-sected. Following flap elevation in (3)P(3) and (4)P(4) regions, the distal roots were removed. In the right jaw quadrants, implants with a sand blasted and acid etched (SLA) surface were placed in the fresh extraction sockets, while in the left jaws the corresponding sockets were left for spontaneous healing. The mesial roots were retained as surgical control teeth. After 3 months, the animals were examined clinically, sacrificed and tissue blocks containing the implant sites, the adjacent tooth sites (mesial root) and the edentulous socket sites were dissected, prepared for ground sectioning and examined in the microscope.

Results

At implant sites, the level of bone-to-implant contact (BC) was located 2.6+/-0.4 mm (buccal aspect) and 0.2+/-0.5 mm (lingual aspect) apical of the SLA level. At the edentulous sites, the mean vertical distance (V) between the marginal termination of the buccal and lingual bone walls was 2.2+/-0.9 mm. At the surgically treated tooth sites, the mean amount of attachment loss was 0.5+/-0.5 mm (buccal) and 0.2+/-0.3 mm (lingual).

Citation impact

820
total citations
FWCI
19.21
Percentile
100%
References
18
Citations per year

Authors

4

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Molar
  • Dentistry
  • Buccal administration
  • Implant
  • Alveolar ridge
  • Mandible (arthropod mouthpart)
  • Dental alveolus
  • Medicine
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Life below water
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