Abstract

Dental implants are among the most common treatments for missing teeth. The thickness of the crestal cortical bone at the potential dental implant site is a critical factor affecting the success rate of dental implant surgery. However, previous studies have predominantly focused on female patients, who are at a high risk of osteoporosis, for the discussion of bone quality and quantity at the dental implant site. This study aimed to investigate the effect of male patients’ age on the crestal cortical bone of the jaw at the dental implant site by using dental cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT). This study performed dental CBCT on 84 male patients of various ages to obtain tomograms of 288 dental implant sites at the jawbone (41 sites in the anterior maxilla, 95 in the posterior maxilla, 59 in the anterior mandible, and 93 in the posterior mandible) for measuring the cortical bone thickness. A one-way analysis of variance and Scheffe’s test were performed on the measurement results to compare the cortical bone thickness at implant sites in the four jaw areas. The correlation between male patient age and cortical bone thickness at the dental implant site was determined. The four jaw areas in order of the cortical bone thickness were as follows: posterior mandible (1.07 ± 0.44 mm), anterior mandible (0.99 ± 0.30 mm), anterior maxilla (0.82 ± 0.32 mm), and posterior maxilla (0.71 ± 0.27 mm). Apart from dental implant sites in the anterior and posterior mandibles, no significant correlation was observed between male patients’ age and the cortical bone thickness at the dental implant site.

Highlights

  • This study investigated the effect of age on the cortical bone thickness at the sites of dental implants in male patients by using dental cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT)

  • The thickness of the occlusal cortical bone at the planned dental implant sites was measured for 84 male patients; 288 measurements were obtained and are

  • This study examined how age affects the crestal cortical bone thickness at the sites of dental implants in male patients and revealed no significant correlation between age and the bone thickness in the anterior or posterior maxilla region

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Summary

Introduction

Due to its high biocompatibility, facilitates osseointegration between the dental implant and the jawbone, aiding in the fixation of the implant to the alveolar bone [1,7,8]. Jawbone quality and quantity can influence dental implant osseointegration ability and the failure rate of dental implant surgery [4,7,8,9,10]. The jawbone is constituted by porous cancellous bone on the inner side and by dense cortical bone on the outer side [5,6]. The literature has revealed a high correlation between the thickness of the cortical bone and the initial stability of dental implants; a high level of initial implant stability is conducive to osseointegration between the cancellous bone and implants [3,4,7,9]

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