“…Pre‐mature loading may be easier to lead to fibrous tissue encapsulation around implants instead of direct osseointegration (Branemark, ; Branemark et al, , , ). Although the protocols of immediate loading or early loading for implants can provide ideal survival rates and clinical outcomes in certain specific situations in some studies (Blanco et al, ; Fuh et al, ; Galindo‐Moreno et al, ; Haverstock et al, ; Jokstad & Alkumru, ), using an early loading protocol for an indication where it is not a viable treatment option may cause implant failure. Faced with different clinical realities, relevant factors should be considered when choosing an early loading protocol, for example maintenance of implant stability and controlled loading (Glauser, Lundgren, et al, ), achievement of primary stability (Eliyas & Al‐Khayatt, ; Esposito, Grusovin, Willings, Coulthard, & Worthington, ; Glauser, Rée, et al, ), selection of implant system (Albrektsson, Branemark, Hansson, & Lindstrom, ; Geckili, Bilhan, & Bilgin, ; Simunek et al, , ), types of restoration, bone quality (Simunek et al, , ) and implant sites (Glauser, Rée, et al, ).…”