The purpose of this study is to investigate whether the immediate definitive abutment connection to dental implant is effective in preventing marginal bone loss when compared to the conventional treatment with late abutment/implant connection, which include three disconnections and reconnections.
The proposed study is a randomized clinical trial in which the participants will be allocated into one of the two arms according to the proposed intervention: experimental group, in which the abutments will be permanently connected immediately at the implant placement procedure; and control group (active comparator) with conventional treatment, where the abutments will be disconnected and reconnected three times. Considering the inclusion and exclusion criteria related to oral and systemic health, a sample of participants will be selected among those partially edentulous patients who seek for dental implants treatment at the Fortaleza University School of Dentistry. The sample size has been calculated based on the standard deviation of 0.17 mm, significance level of 5% and 80% statistical test power. To detect a clinically significant difference of 0.2 mm, each group should be composed of 11 participants. Therefore, considering a 10% margin for possible dropouts or missing data, the study will include 24 participants divided into two groups. Each participant will receive one or two implants according to his/her needs, so the study may include more than 24 implants. A single surgeon will perform the implant surgical procedure in order to reduce variations inherent to clinical experience. After local anesthesia and incision on the top of the alveolar ridge, the bone will be exposed by the mucoperiosteal flap elevation. The mucosal thickness will be measured at implant sites, before the lingual/palatal flap elevation, with a periodontal probe. The drilling sequence will be done according to manufacturer's recommendations, under saline solution irrigation, intermittent movements and speed up to 1200rpm. The implants should develop a final insertion torque of 32Ncm or above to enable abutment connection torque, indicated at the experimental arm. The implant primary stability will be also measured by resonance frequency analysis (Osstell; Osstell AB, Gothenburg, Sweden). A minimum 65 ISQ will be required to a single-stage surgery. Thus, those implants that do not contemplate these requirements will be excluded from the study and will receive a conventional treatment with two-stage surgery if necessary. Before finishing the surgical procedure, the volunteers will be randomly assigned to one of the two arms by opening sealed envelopes with a random sequence generated by Excel (Microsoft, Redmond, Washington, USA). Therefore, the surgeon will identify each volunteer's arm only after the end of drilling, insertion and stabilization of the implants. Each implant allocated at the control arm (active comparator) will receive conventional treatment with three abutment disconnections and reconnections. At the experimental arm, each implant will receive the prosthetic abutment in a definitive way immediately at the surgical procedure, avoiding any abutment disconnection. The surgeries of both arms will be finished with suture, drug prescription and postoperative recommendations. All implants will receive temporary crowns at three months and definitive prosthesis until six months after surgery. Intraoral radiographs will be done with paralleling technique immediately after surgery (baseline) and at 3, 6, 12 and 24 months later. The radiographs will have its dimensions corrected at the ImageJ software (National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland, USA) having implant known dimensions as reference. Each implant will have its radiographs evaluated by a previously calibrated examiner with a minimum of 0.8 intra-rater reliability for the intraclass correlation coefficient. The examiner will not know to which arm the X-rays belong. Primary and secondary outcomes data will be submitted to normality test and compared using statistical tests for paired and unpaired samples.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
26
The volunteers will receive one or two dental implant(s) placed by a surgical procedure, under local anesthesia and careful soft and hard tissue handling. After implant insertion, the volunteers will be randomly assigned to one arm.
At the active comparator arm, each implant will receive a titanium healing abutment during the surgery, according to manufacturer's recommendations. Three dis-/reconnections of abutments will be performed after the soft tissue healing period: the first, after 8 weeks, for adjustment of the emergence profile by healing abutment changing; the second, 10 weeks after surgery, for intra-oral prosthetic abutment selection; and the third, 12 weeks after surgery, for the prosthetic abutment definitive connection with the manufacturer recommended torque.
Fortaleza University; Health Sciences Center; School of Dentistry.
Fortaleza, Ceará, Brazil
Peri-implant marginal bone level change.
To estimate the gingival margin stability and the long-term success of implant-supported restorations, the peri-implant marginal bone level will be assessed as primary outcome through intraoral radiographs, in a perspective of bone maintenance, bone loss or bone gain.
Time frame: 2, 6, 12 and 24 months after implant surgery.
Implant stability change.
The implant stability will be measured using a resonance frequency analysis equipment to confirm the implant osseointegration.
Time frame: 3 and 6 months after implant surgery.
Gingival level change.
The gingival level will be measured using a periodontal probe and an acrylic stent as a reference.
Time frame: 6, 12 and 24 months after implant surgery.
Peri-implant probing depth change.
To evaluate the peri-implant health, the probing depth will be assessed in 6 areas around the implant using the prosthetic abutment as a reference.
Time frame: 12 and 24 months after implant surgery.
Bleeding on probing change.
To evaluate the peri-implant health, the bleeding on probing will be observer or not at until 10 seconds after peri-implant probing.
Time frame: 12 and 24 months after implant surgery.
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Each experimental arm implant will receive its definitive prosthetic abutment at the surgical procedure. The manufacturer recommended torque will be applied so that no disconnection of the abutment will occur during and after completion of the treatment. The abutment will receive healing caps, which shall remain in position until the end of 12 weeks after surgery.