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Abstract
2008, Vol. 79, No. 7, Pages 1280-1286
(doi:10.1902/jop.2008.070496)
Ultrashort Sintered Porous-Surfaced Dental Implants Used To Replace Posterior Teeth Douglas Deporter,* Bunnai Ogiso, Dong-Seok Sohn, Kevin Ruljancich,§ and Michael Pharoah *Discipline of Periodontics, Faculty of Dentistry, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON. †Department of Endodontics, Nihon University Dental School, Tokyo, Japan. ‡Department of Oral Surgery, Daegu Catholic University Hospital, Daegu, South Korea. §Private practice, Melbourne, Australia. Discipline of Radiology, Faculty of Dentistry, University of Toronto.
Background: This retrospective multicenter report provides data from a case series of partially edentulous subjects treated with an ultrashort (5-mm-long) sintered porous-surfaced (SPS) dental implant. Methods: The implant used had a tapered truncated cone shape, was 5-mm long, and had a maximal coronal diameter of 5 mm. Twenty-six implants were placed in 20 subjects to replace primarily maxillary and mandibular molar teeth. Submerged primary healing was used. Nine implants were restored with single crowns, one carried a single cantilever, and the remaining 16 implants were part of fixed implant-supported bridges, generally as the most distal abutment. Results: After functional periods of 1 to 8 years, two maxillary implants failed, giving maxillary and mandibular failure rates of 14.3% and 0%, respectively. Conclusion: The results of this case series suggest that an SPS, press-fit, tapered dental implant with a length of 5 mm and a maximal coronal diameter of 5 mm should be investigated further as a solution for the management of highly resorbed posterior sites in partial edentulism, particularly in the mandible. KEYWORDS: Case series, dental implants, molar tooth
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