Primary stability of short implants inserted using piezoelectric or drilling systems: an in vitro comparison.

implant site preparation piezoelectric surgery polyurethane foam blocks posterior maxilla short implants.

Journal

The Journal of oral implantology
ISSN: 0160-6972
Titre abrégé: J Oral Implantol
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 7801086

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
22 Apr 2019
Historique:
entrez: 23 4 2019
pubmed: 23 4 2019
medline: 23 4 2019
Statut: aheadofprint

Résumé

The primary objective of the present in vitro study was to evaluate the influence of implant site preparation technique (drills vs. ultrasonic instrumentation) on the primary stability of short dental implants with two different designs inserted in simulated low quality cancellous bone. Eighty implant sites were prepared in custom-made solid rigid polyurethane blocks with two different low cancellous bone densities (5 or 15 pounds per cubic foot, PCF), equally distributed between piezoelectric (Surgysonic Moto, Esacrom, Italy) and conventional drilling techniques. Two short implant systems (Prama and Syra, Sweden & Martina) were tested by inserting 40 fixtures of each system (both 6.0 mm length and 5.0 mm diameter), divided in the four subgroups (drills/5 PCF density; drills/15 PCF density; piezo/5 PCF density; piezo/15 PCF density). Insertion torque (Ncm), implant stability quotient values, removal torque (Ncm) and surgical time were recorded. Data were analyzed by three-way ANOVA and Scheffé's test (α=0.05). With slight variations among the considered dependent variables, overall high primary implant stability was observed across all subgroups. Piezoelectric instrumentation allowed for comparable or slightly superior primary stability in comparison with the drilling procedures in both implant systems. Prama implants group showed the highest mean reverse torque, Syra implants the highest implant stability quotient values. Piezoelectric implant site preparation took prolonged operative time compared to conventional preparation with drills; among the drilling procedures, Syra system requires fewer surgical steps and shorter operative time.

Identifiants

pubmed: 31008684
doi: 10.1563/aaid-joi-D-18-00157
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Auteurs

Claudio Stacchi (C)

1 TRIESTE UNIVERSITY BIOMEDICINE University of Trieste.

De Biasi Matteo (B)

2 Universita degli Studi di Trieste Research Fellow University Clinical Department of Medical, Surgical and Health Sciences University of Trieste.

Lucio Torelli (L)

3 University of Trieste.

Massimo Robiony (M)

4 University of Udine.

Roberto Di Lenarda (R)

5 University of Trieste.

Daniele Angerame (D)

6 University of Trieste.

Classifications MeSH