ObjectivesTo appraise the feasibility of loading four implants with a pre-existing denture converted to a fixed dental prosthesis (FDP) on the day of implant surgery compared with waiting for 3- to 4-month healing.MethodsPatients with an edentulous, fully healed mandible were recruited in a faculty clinic to partake in a blinded two-arm parallel randomized controlled trial (RCT). The participants received four parallel intraforamina mandibular implants with a moderately rough titanium surface (Brånemark System Mk III or Mk IV TiUnite; Nobel Biocare AB, Göteborg, Sweden). The implants were loaded on the same day by converting the participants' pre-existing denture in the experimental group. The implants were placed using a one-stage surgery procedure, and the participants' pre-existing denture were soft-relined in the control group. For both groups, the permanent 10- to 12-unit FDP consisting of a type-3 cast precious alloy veneered with acrylic and artificial teeth was placed 3–4 months after implant surgery. All participants have been recalled annually for 5 years for appraisal of bone loss and registration of adverse events.ResultsThirty-five of the original 42 participants (83%) returned for clinical and radiological examinations at the 5-year follow-up recall. No selective dropout or specific reasons for dropout was identified in the two study arms; leaving n = 17 (Intention-to-treat group, ITT) in the experimental group, alternatively n = 13 as per protocol group (PP), and n = 18 participants in the control group (ITT = PP). At study commencement, five of the participants assigned to the experimental group did not receive their planned intervention. In the control group, one implant failed to osseointegrate and another failed due to bone loss after 5 years. The crestal bone level changes over 5 years were identical in the experimental and control groups, that is, 1.2 mm (SD = 0.7). There were no differences between the two study arms with regard to incidence of biological and technical adverse events.ConclusionsImplants in the anterior mandible loaded immediately with a converted pre-existing denture appear to yield analogous clinical outcomes compared with waiting for 3–4 months over the first 5 years following implant surgery.
The aim of this study was to determine angle of convergence (AC) of posterior crown preparations made by predoctoral dental students at the University of Toronto. Ninety-one dies of students' crown preparations were digitally scanned with an in-Eos-Blue scanner (Sirona). Created images were virtually sliced at three similar locations of mesiodistal and buccolingual planes. Virtual protractor was used to determine AC of each section. Means and SDs were calculated, and data were statistically analyzed with ANOVA and student's t-test for operator's gender, experience, and tooth type. There were no signiicant differences among the groups except for AC of preparations grouped by tooth type (p<0.0001). The greatest mean mesiodistal AC was 26.4° found with mandibular molars, while the smallest was 16° found with maxillary premolars. ANOVA revealed signiicant difference in mean mesiodistal AC among groups (p<0.01). Also, greatest mean buccolingual AC was 25° found with mandibular molars, while the smallest was 20.8° found with maxillary premolars. ANOVA did not reveal signiicant difference in mean buccolingual AC among groups (p>0.05). Overall mean AC values were greater than ideal range of 2-5°; however, they were within ranges published for dentists/prosthodontists. Gender and experience had no signiicant effect on AC, but tooth type signiicantly affected AC.
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