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Osseointegrated Oral implants : Mechanisms of Implant Anchorage, Threats and Long-Term Survival Rates



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Autore: Albrektsson Tomas Visualizza persona
Titolo: Osseointegrated Oral implants : Mechanisms of Implant Anchorage, Threats and Long-Term Survival Rates Visualizza cluster
Pubblicazione: Basel, Switzerland, : MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute, 2020
Descrizione fisica: 1 electronic resource (368 p.)
Soggetto topico: Medicine
Soggetto non controllato: osseointegration
dental implant
peri-implantitis
ligature-induced peri-implantitis
aseptic loosening
systematic review
immune system
biomaterials
foreign body reaction
in vivo study
oral implants
marginal bone loss
immunomodulation
mechanotransduction
Crestal bone loss
osseosufficiency
osseoseparation
photoacoustic ultrasound
brain-bone axis
overloading
radiography
CBCT (cone beam computerized tomography)
osteogenesis
osteotomy
bone healing
bone chips
drilling tool design
fused deposition modeling
polyether ether ketone
biocomposite
orthopedic implant
oral implant
mechanical properties
wettability
topography
biocompatibility
cell adhesion
peri-implant endosseous healing
dental implantation
alveolar bone loss
alveolar bone remodeling/regeneration
bone biology
finite element analysis (FEA)
biomechanics
cell plasticity
dental implants
electron microscopy
scanning transmission electron microscopy
bone-implant interface
bone loss
overdenture
implant survival
implant surface
soft tissue
split-mouth design
oral health-related quality of life
patient-reported outcome measures
biomaterial
bone
immune
implant
healing
titanium
PEEK
Cu
micro-RNA
microarray
predictive biomarker
epigenomics
mucositis
diagnosis
over-treatment
iatrogenic damage
abutment height
subcrestal implants
implant insertion depth
vertical mucosal thickness
biological width
implant installation
anchorage technique
histology
intraosseous temperature
finite element model
ligature induced peri-implantitis
arthroplasty
replacement
hip
hypersensitivity
contact
allergy and immunology
cytokines
Interleukin-8
surface properties
materials testing
implant contamination
scanning electron microscopy
energy-dispersive X-ray spectrometry
convergence
clinical study
biofilm
infection
perio-prosthetic joint infection
periimplantitis
electrolytic cleaning
zirconia
insertion
heat
bone damage
early loss
augmentation
air flow
re-osseointegration
classification of bone defects
dog study
Persona (resp. second.): AlbrektssonTomas
Sommario/riassunto: In the past, osseointegration was regarded to be a mode of implant anchorage that simulated a simple wound healing phenomenon. Today, we have evidence that osseointegration is, in fact, a foreign body reaction that involves an immunologically derived bony demarcation of an implant to shield it off from the tissues. Marginal bone resorption around an oral implant cannot be properly understood without realizing the foreign body nature of the implant itself. Whereas the immunological response as such is positive for implant longevity, adverse immunological reactions may cause marginal bone loss in combination with combined factors. Combined factors include the hardware, clinical handling as well as patient characteristics that, even if each one of these factors only produce subliminal trauma, when acting together they may result in loss of marginal bone. The role of bacteria in the process of marginal bone loss is smaller than previously believed due to combined defense mechanisms of inflammation and immunological reactions, but if the defense is failing we may see bacterially induced marginal bone loss as well. However, problems with loss of marginal bone threatening implant survival remains relatively uncommon; we have today 10 years of clinical documentation of five different types of implant displaying a failure rate in the range of only 1 to 4 %.
Altri titoli varianti: Osseointegrated Oral implants
Titolo autorizzato: Osseointegrated Oral implants  Visualizza cluster
Formato: Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione: Inglese
Record Nr.: 9910557410103321
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
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