Associations between cortical bone‐to‐implant contact and microstructure derived from CBCT and implant primary stability

Author:

Feng Lan1ORCID,Chen Haida1,Chen Ziyun1,Chen Yan1,Gu Xinhua1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Stomatology, The First Affiliated Hospital College of Medicine, Zhejiang University Hangzhou China

Abstract

AbstractObjectivesTo evaluate the associations between the cortical bone‐to‐implant contact (CBIC), bone microstructure derived from cone‐beam computed tomography (CBCT), and the primary stability of the implant.Materials and MethodsTwenty‐two patients with 65 implants were enrolled in this study. The peak insertion torque values (ITVs) were measured during implant insertion, and the implant stability quotient (ISQ) values were measured immediately after implant placement and 3 months after surgery. The profiles of the peri‐implant bone structure were outlined using the volumetric reconstruction of the CBCTs and superimposition of the virtual models, and the features of CBIC and bone microstructure parameters were measured. The linear mixed effects model and generalized estimating equation were used to explore the predictors for implant primary stability.ResultsThe average ITV, baseline, and secondary ISQ values were 31.44 ± 6.54 N·cm, 73.34 ± 7.39, and 80.32 ± 4.58, respectively. Statistically significant correlations were found between ITV and surface area of CBIC (r = .340, p = .006), bone volume fraction (r = .294, p = .017), and bone surface fraction (r = −.278, p = .039). Implants with buccolingual CBIC had a higher ITV than implants without CBIC (p = .016). None of the parameters were associated with baseline and secondary ISQ values in generalized estimating equation analysis (all p > .05).ConclusionsWithin the limitations of the study, preoperative CBCT measurements might enable the prediction of ITV and therefore of implant primary stability values.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Oral Surgery

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