PubMed-ID: 18271369Seiten: 886-892, Sprache: EnglischFernandes, Eduardo de Lima / Unikowski, Ieda Levenzon / Teixeira, Eduardo Rolim / Costa, Nilza Pereira da / Shinkai, Rosemary Sadami
Purpose: This study evaluated the effect of primary stability on the osseointegration of turned and acid-etched screw implants in a rabbit model.
Materials and Methods: One pair of turned and acid-etched implants (3.75 in diameter, 5.5 mm long) was placed in each tibia of 15 rabbits. In the right tibial metaphysis the implants were inserted according to a standard surgical protocol. In the left tibia, the osteotomy sites were enlarged using a sequence of drills, and 2 implants were placed with reduction of primary stability. Animals were sacrificed 9 weeks after surgery. Histomorphometric and removal torque analyses were performed to evaluate bone-implant contact and strength of osseointegration.
Results: Surface texture had a significant effect on percentage of bone-implant contact (P = .001). Acid-etched implants with high primary stability showed the highest percentage of bone-implant contact (77%), followed by acid-etched implants with low primary stability (61%), turned implants with low primary stability (56%), and turned implants with high primary stability (46%). For removal torque, acid-etched implants had higher peak mean values than turned implant groups (P < .001). Reduction of primary stability was not significant to either percentage of bone-implant contact (P = .645) or removal torque values (P = .214).
Conclusion: Acid-etched implants had higher bone response and implant fixation than turned implants, regardless of primary stability.
Schlagwörter: dental implant, osseointegration, primary stability, surface treatment