Abstract

Peri-implantitis is a biofilm-related disease whose characteristics are peri-implant tissues inflammation and bone resorption. Some clinical trials report beneficial effects after implantoplasty, namely the surgical smoothening of the implant surface, but there is a lack of data about the development of the bacterial biofilm on those smoothened surfaces. The aim of this study is to evaluate how implantoplasty influences biofilm formation. Three implants with moderately rough surfaces (control) and three implants treated with implantoplasty (test) were set on a tray reproducing the supra- and sub-gingival environment. One volunteer wore this tray for five days. Every 24 h, plaque coverage was measured and, at the end of the period of observartion, the implant surfaces were analyzed using scanning electron microscopy and confocal laser scanning microscopy. The proportion of implant surface covered with plaque was 65% (SD = 7.07) of the control implants and 16% (SD = 0) of the test implants. Untreated surfaces showed mature, complex biofilm structures with wide morphological diversity, and treated surfaces did not show the formation of mature biofilm structures. This study supports the efficacy of implantoplasty in reducing plaque adhesion and influencing biofilm formation. These results can be considered a preliminary proof of concept, but they may encourage further studies about the effects of implantoplasty on biofilm formation.

Highlights

  • Oral implant rehabilitations can be affected by a biological complication called peri-implantitis that causes the loss of support bone

  • In 1993, the European Workshop of Periodontology [3] distinguished peri-implant mucositis from peri-implantitis: the first one is defined as “an inflammatory reaction reversible soft tissue surrounding an implant subjected to functional load” and the second one as “inflammation of the tissues with peri-implant bone loss of support”

  • The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of implantoplasty on biofilm development

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Summary

Introduction

Oral implant rehabilitations can be affected by a biological complication called peri-implantitis that causes the loss of support bone. The term peri-implantitis is introduced by Levignac [1] to describe the infectious disease that creates peri-implant osteolysis. Mombelli et al [2], in a study on the bacterial colonization affecting implants with and without bone resorption, concludes that peri-implantitis is a “specific infection site that has much in common with periodontitis”. In 1993, the European Workshop of Periodontology [3] distinguished peri-implant mucositis from peri-implantitis: the first one is defined as “an inflammatory reaction reversible soft tissue surrounding an implant subjected to functional load” and the second one as “inflammation of the tissues with peri-implant bone loss of support”. The term peri-implantitis, as confirmed in the.

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