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Bacterial Composition at the Implant-Abutment Connection under Loading in vivo

  • University of Rochester
  • The Forsyth Institute
  • Harvard University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

55 Scopus citations

Abstract

Purpose: Platform-switched implants have been demonstrated to prevent bone loss after loading. The present study evaluated bacterial composition of sites from implant-abutment connections of immediately loaded implants, which were placed in the anterior mandible. Ten patients participated in this study. Materials and Methods: A and B implant systems with two different prosthetic connections (Morse tapered vs internal polygonal butt-joint connections, respectively) were placed and loaded for 2 years. The abutments were removed (AB sample) after careful decontamination. Bacterial sampling of the abutments, inner part of the implants (before/visit 1 and after rinsing with chlorhexidine [CHX]/visit 2), and after new abutment connection and loading for 1 additional month, a new sampling (visit 3) was taken to compare the bacteria composition in association with the two connections. Bacterial profiles of samples were determined by using the human oral microbe identification microarray. Results: A total of 240 samples were analyzed taken at different time intervals. Nonparametric statistical analysis (Wilcoxon Rank sum) with uncorrected alpha (p<.05) and after corrections (Benjamini-Hochberg) found no statistical significance between the two connections. No significant changes in the overall microbial profiles were detected at the different time intervals. However, there were trends toward presence of periodontitis-associated species at the B implants in all samples (AB, visit 1, even after CHX irrigation) and after decontamination, abutment replacement, and 1-month loading period. Conclusions: CHX irrigation does not seem to have any effect on decontamination of connections. As shown previously, there is significantly more bone loss around B implants compared with A implants. Although there was no statistical difference in the microbial profiles, there was indeed a trend for the presence of typical periodontal pathogens associated with the internal polygonal butt-joint connection. A possible scenario is that this connection tends to harbor the pathogens that may be involved in subsequent bone loss.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)138-145
Number of pages8
JournalClinical Implant Dentistry and Related Research
Volume18
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 1 2016

Keywords

  • Bacteria, immediate loading
  • Implant-abutment interface
  • Platform switching

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