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Immediate Implants
are defined as Dental Implants that are placed
at the time of an extraction into the extraction
socket. The extraction socket is essentially
utilized as the space for the implant fixture
after some minor re-adaptation with a series of
shaping drills. The biochemical rationale is to
take temporal advantage of the "repair cell
cascade" of events that take place after a tooth
has been extracted. Other, more clinically
oriented advantages include a decrease in
treatment time for the patient and a means of
immediately restoring the empty space with an
implant supported temporary crown, if the
initial stabilization of the implant fixture is
adequate. In contrast to a temporary stay plate
(a.k.a. flipper), the immediate temporization of
a dental implant will yield better maintenance
of the gum shape, especially the scalloping of
the gums between the teeth, during the
osseointegration phase.
Indications and Contraindications
The following
parameters are necessary in order for a patient
to be considered for this procedure:
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The patient
should be a non-smoker.
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The patient needs
to be compliant enough to avoid excessive
forces on the temporized implant during the
first 4 - 6 weeks (i.e. no chewing on the
implant)
-
The doctor will
need to check other parameters in order to
establish candidacy.
If any of the above
parameters are not met, an immediate implant
with immediate temporization may be a strong
contraindication.
A case study:
The featured patient
below presented with moderate to severe symptoms
of pain on one of his upper incisors. The
history on this tooth included a sharp frontal
impact several weeks prior. Although the soft
tissues had healed well since then, the pain in
that particular tooth never vanished. An x-ray
revealed a very thin horizontal fracture line at
the bottom area of the root. The tooth and
fractured root tip were extracted in and a
dental implant fixture was placed into the
re-adapted extraction socket. A temporary
abutment was prepared and shaped into its proper
form and a temporary crown was made with a
strong composite material. The temporary crown
was then cemented onto the temporary abutment.
The patient was able
to leave with a temporized tooth within the same
appointment of the extraction. The entire
procedure took about 2 hours and was performed
with only minimal local anesthetic.
Final impressions
were taken approximately 5 months after the
initial placement of the implant fixture. The
final restoration consisted of a custom-cast and
milled gold abutment, and a cementable
metal-ceramic crown.
The case study is illustrated in more detail
below:
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