Editorial Type:
Article Category: Research Article
 | 
Online Publication Date: 01 Feb 2018

Do Clinical and Radiological Assessments Contribute to the Understanding of Biomaterials? Results From a Prospective Randomized Sinus Augmentation Split-Mouth Trial

DMD,
DMD,
DMD,
DMD,
MD, PhD,
DMD, MD, PhD, and
DMD, MD, PhD
Page Range: 62 – 69
DOI: 10.1563/aaid-joi-D-17-00139
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The present prospective randomized split-mouth trial reports on the 3-year clinical and radiological follow-up investigation of implants placed 7 months after sinus augmentation with 2 different bone substitute materials. The aim of the study was to complete the histologic observation of cellular reactions by analyses of the implants and the volumetric changes of the augmented bone substitute materials. A sinus augmentation split-mouth trial was performed in 14 patients with the synthetic bone substitute material Nanobone (NB) and the xenogeneic Bio-Oss (BO). Changes in volume and density of the augmented biomaterials were investigated by analysis of computed tomography scans, taken immediately after augmentation and after 7 months. Clinical implant parameters were assessed after 3 years of loading. Both bone substitute materials underwent nonsignificant volume reduction and significant increase in bone density over an integration period of 7 months. No significant differences concerning volume and bone density were observed between the groups. Three years after loading, 51 of 53 implants were in situ with no peri-implant infections, and only a few soft-tissue variations were present. The present prospective randomized study showed that no differences could be observed clinically and radiologically. Accordingly, it seems that both biomaterials, independent of their physicochemical composition, enable clinical success and long-time stability for dental implants. Interestingly, the histological results showed distinct differences in cellular reactions: While the xenogeneic BO induced a mild tissue reaction with only few multinucleated giant cells and comparably low vascularization, the synthetic NB induced a multinucleated giant cell-triggered tissue reaction with an increase of vascularization. Thus, the present study showed that a combination analysis—histological, clinical, and radiological—is necessary for a detailed assessment of a biomaterial's quality for clinical application.

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  <sc>Figures</sc>
  1 and 2
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Figures 1 and 2

Figure 1. Radiographic images of patient 4 (a) after implant placement and (b) after 3 years of loading. The peri-implant bone level seems to be at a stable level, and no signs of peri-implant infection are obvious. Figure 2. Clinical image of patient 4 after 3 years of loading. Implants are restored with telescopic Galvano crowns. The implants are surrounded by a sufficient amount of attached gingiva, and the peri-implant soft tissue is free of infection.


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  <sc>Figures 3–5</sc>
</bold>
Figures 3–5

Figure 3. Graphical representation of the average volume of the Bio-Oss (BO)- and the Nanobone (NB)-augmented region immediately and 7 months after augmentation (in cm3). Figure 4. Graphical representation of the comparative volume analysis of the BO- and the NB-augmented region 7 months after augmentation (in cm3). Figure 5. Graphical representation of the comparative density analysis of the BO- and the NB-augmented region immediately and 7 months after augmentation compared to the density of the zygomatic bone (in Hounsfield units; *P ≤ .05; ***P ≤ .001).


Contributor Notes

Corresponding author, e-mail: shahram.ghanaati@kgu.de
These authors contributed equally.
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