Abstract

The goal of implant therapy is to provide patients with a predictable, aesthetically and functionally satisfying treatment outcome with a low risk of aesthetic complications. Dental implants have been utilized by mankind for thousands of years, but only recently they have achieved widespread acceptance from the profession. Anterior sites are more likely related to aesthetic expectations and often represent a considerable challenge for involved clinicians and dental technicians, since various local risk factors have the potential to compromise the predictability of the result. In recent years, substantial efforts have been made to increase the appeal of implant therapy by shortening the overall treatment time and minimizing the number of surgical intervention. According to traditional protocol, a 12 month healing after extraction was suggested, but over the past few years alternative approaches have been proposed, such as immediate implant placement at the time of extraction or early implant placement following weeks of soft tissue healing. Common to all of these approaches is the requirement of adequate remaining bone volume. If there is no adequate bone volume, techniques like guided bone regeneration (GBR) are used for ridge augmentation before implant placement. The present case has utilized an endosteal root form implant and the advantage of guided bone regeneration technique in regaining aesthetic demands of the patient.

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