Effect of intermittent loading and surface roughness on peri-implant bone formation in a bone chamber model
Publisher
: Blackwell Synergy
Summary :Both implant surface characteristics and mechanical loading are known to affect
implant osseointegration. Their interaction and the underlying mechanisms by which
they affect peri-implant healing processes are still unknown. The aim of this study is
therefore to investigate the influence of a turned versus a rough (Pluss, Dentsply
Friadent) implant surface on peri-implant bone formation in case of unloaded or loaded
implant healing.
Material and Methods: Bone formation was evaluated around screw-shaped
implants under four experimental conditions using a repeated sampling bone chamber
methodology: (1) unloaded turned implant (CU), (2) unloaded implant with a rough
surface (TU), (3) loaded turned implant (CL), and (4) loaded implant with a rough
surface (TL). Peri-implant tissue samples were paraffin embedded after implant
removal and examined histologically and histomorphometrically. A mixed model was
used for statistical analysis.
Results: The surface of bone tissue relative to the total tissue area (bone area fraction)
was not affected by the experimental conditions. The areas of bone trabeculae relative
to the bone area (bone fraction) were significantly higher for TL compared with CU
and TU. The bone fraction in the vicinity (100 mm zone) of the implant (BFZ) was
significantly the highest around the loaded roughened implants (TL).
Conclusion: Implant loading did not affect bone formation in the absence of surface
roughness, and implant surface roughness had no effect in the absence of loading.
However, a bone-stimulating effect in the implant’s vicinity was assigned to the rough
surface when the implant was loaded.
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