Contemporary plasma-sprayed hydroxylapatite (HA) coatings with high crystalline content are much more resistant to in vivo degradation than HA coatings of a decade ago but reportedly exhibit reduced wettability, which could potentially negatively affect tissue adhesion and long-term clinical outcome. The present prospective study was undertaken to determine if highly crystalline HA MP-1-coated implants could meet a minimum 5-year implant success rate standard of 85% in view of their previously reported decreased wettability. Study subjects were consecutive patients with 1 or more missing teeth in the maxillary and/or mandibular jaw who presented in 3 university dental clinics and 1 private dental practice. A total of 120 patients were treated per protocol and successfully restored with implant-supported prostheses. Four implants failed in 3 patients and were withdrawn from the study. There were no other irresolvable adverse events. Cumulative implant success at 5 years was 97% (n = 184 implants in 88 patients), which exceeded the 85% standard for implant success after 5 years of clinical function.
Loosening of implant abutment and prosthesis screws during functional loading is an industry-wide phenomenon that is especially well documented with the external hexagon implant connection. Although numerous efforts to reduce or eliminate screw loosening have been attempted, the problem still persists, especially with implant restorations in the partially edentulous patient. In 1992, the spline was developed as an alternative to the external hexagon implant-abutment connection. A prospective multicenter study was begun in 1996 to evaluate the abutment and prosthesis screw joint stability of Spline dental implants (Centerpulse Dental Division, Carlsbad, California) over 5 years of post-loading clinical follow-up. From October 1996 to December 2000, 73 partially edentulous patients were consecutively treated with 113 Spline implants placed in two private dental practices. Three patients with 1 implant each withdrew from the study for various reasons; of the remaining 110 implants in 70 patients who continued in the study, 82% (n = 90) were placed between 1997 and 1998. No cases of abutment or prosthesis screw loosening occurred with up to 54 months (mean = 38.95 mo; range, 3-54 mo; mode, 20 mo) of post-loading clinical follow-up. These interim findings of the ongoing study suggest that Spline dental implants may provide a stable prosthetic connection in partially edentulous cases during short-term clinical follow-up.
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