Abstract

Background and objectives: The main purpose of this study was to evaluate the survival and success rates of dental implants with a double acid-etched surface treatment with evaluation times up to 10 years post-loading. Materials and Methods: This study was conducted at a hospital oral surgery and implantology unit. It included 111 dental implants with a double acid-etched surface. Three groups were created: Group 1 (1–3 years loading), Group 2 (3–5 years loading), and Group 3 (over 5 years loading). Probing depth, resonance frequency analysis (ISQ value), and marginal bone loss were evaluated. Results: The data obtained underwent statistical analysis. Overall, 78 patients were included in the study, who received, in total, 111 dental implants, all replacing single teeth. Mean probing depth was 3.03 mm and mean ISQ was 65.54. Regarding marginal bone loss, in Group 1, 67.6% of implants did not undergo any thread loss, in Group 2, 48.3%, and in Group 3, 59.6%; 59.10% of all implants did not present thread loss with a mean bone loss of 0.552 mm. The implant survival rate was 99.1%, and the success rate was 96.37%. Conclusions: Implants with a double acid-etched surface showed excellent success rates in terms of marginal bone loss, ISQ, and probing depth after up to 10 years of loading, making them a clinically predictable treatment option. Future studies are needed to compare this implant surface with other types in different restorative situations.

Highlights

  • Dental implant placement is one of the best treatment options for replacing one or more teeth

  • The aim aim of of this this study study was was to to assess assess peri-implant peri-implant mucosa mucosa behavior behavior by by analyzing: analyzing: The success and survival rates, ISQ

  • ISQ values pointed to adequate osseointegration at up to 10 years’ post-loading, while evaluations of marginal bone loss and probing depth obtained acceptable results at all follow-up times

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Summary

Introduction

Dental implant placement is one of the best treatment options for replacing one or more teeth. The success of dental implants is based on osseointegration, among other principles. Osseointegration is the process of interaction between the surface of the dental implant and the patient’s bone. The surface treatment of the dental implant—. Roughness, topography, and chemical composition—can increase the contact area between implant and bone, which improves osseointegration. This point is considered to be one of the key factors for ensuring a high success rate [4,5,6,7,8,9,10]

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