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Article

Retrospective Study of Biohorizons® Implants Placed by Postgraduate Students at the University of Barcelona

by
Arianna Graterol-Duran
1,
Raùl Ayuso-Montero
2,
Constanza Saka-Herrán
1,
Mónica Blazquez-Hinarejos
1,
Paula Roca-Obis
1,
Antonio Marí-Roig
3 and
José López-López
2,*
1
Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, School of Dentistry, University of Barcelona, 08907 Barcelona, Spain
2
Oral Health and Masticatory System Group-IDIBELL, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, School of Dentistry, Odontological Hospital University of Barcelona, University of Barcelona, 08907 Barcelona, Spain
3
Department of Clinical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of Barcelona, 08907 Barcelona, Spain
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Appl. Sci. 2022, 12(6), 2958; https://doi.org/10.3390/app12062958
Submission received: 18 January 2022 / Revised: 6 March 2022 / Accepted: 7 March 2022 / Published: 14 March 2022
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Applied Science for Oral Implantology—Fake vs. News)

Abstract

:
The study aimed to evaluate the survival and failure rate, in the short- and medium-term, in addition to its relationship with risk factors, in implants placed by postgraduate students of the Master of Medicine, Surgery, and Oral Implantology course from the University of Barcelona. The study was designed including 192 patients with 422 implants placed between 2015 and 2018. Variables of implant failure were evaluated and related. Failure was split into early failure and late failure. Qualitative data were compared using the chi-squared test, taking p ≤ 0.05 as a significant value. The comparison of quantitative variables was carried out using the Student’s t-test for independent samples. The survival rate in a period of 6 months to 3 years was 97.87%. The mean age of the patients was (54.5 ± 13), and the largest number of implants were placed in the 51–60 age range. The failure rate was 2.13% (N = 9), 6 failed early and 3 failed after definitive prosthetic loading, with a p value < 0.0001. When comparing the failures according to their location in the anterior/posterior sector of the arch, the anterior sector showed statistically significant results (p = 0.027). Failed implants had a statistically significant relationship when they were placed in the anterior sector and were performed in the early stage.

1. Introduction

As a highly effective and predictable treatment over time, osseointegrated implants are currently the prosthetic rehabilitation procedure of choice for returning functionality and aesthetics to partially and fully edentulous patients [1]. Longitudinal studies have provided evidence for an implant survival rate of 89–96% over a period of 10 years [2,3,4].
Although implantology treatment in odontology is predictable, complications can still occur, which directly influence success and failure rates. Some of the most prevalent complications include peri-implant mucositis (19–65%), peri-implantitis (1–47%) [3,5,6], the aesthetic and mechanical failures of the prosthetic rehabilitation [7], and the complete loss of the implant osseointegration, pre- and post-functional load [8,9].
The success of dental implants is related to both the surgical technique and a series of factors that can contribute to their failure over the short-term. Insufficient crestal bone height or width can require regenerative surgeries that sometimes occur simultaneously with implant placement, and can lead to complications, such as soft tissue dehiscence, infections, or insufficient final bone quality [10,11]. On the one hand, it has been shown that among patients receiving sinus lifts, guided bone regenerations, splits, or bone grafts among other bone regeneration techniques, the success rate of fitted implants is similar to implants placed into native bone and close to 96.4% [12,13,14]. In other matters, a range of investigations have shown that the patient’s systemic condition, including diabetes [15], hypertension [16], osteoporosis [17], allergies [18,19], smoking [20], periodontitis [21], and different habits (oral hygiene [22] or parafunctions [23] among others), is a risk factor for treatment with implants [2,4,24,25], particularly when not controlled.
Most of the data referring to failure and survival percentages in the literature have been provided by experienced surgeons, expert teams with links to commercial brands, or private professionals [3,26]. However, there are limited data on success, survival, and failure percentages of dental implants placed by postgraduate students. Prior studies have shown that operators skills influence implant osseointegration, with success rates of 84.0% during the first 50 implants, with the rate increasing to 94.4% among later implants [27]. Scientific investigations with undergraduate students have shown a success and survival rate with over 5 years’ follow up of 88.0% and 97.2%, respectively [28], while the percentages for postgraduate students are 94.62% and 96.15%, respectively, at one year of follow-up [29].
Based on the presented data, this investigation aims to evaluate the survival and failure rate in the short- and long term of Biohorizons® implants placed by postgraduate students of the Master of Medicine, Surgery, and Oral Implantology course of the University of Barcelona. In addition, it aims to evaluate the relationship between failure and the systemic status of patients.

2. Materials and Methods

A retrospective descriptive study was conducted of the surgical procedures and their follow-up among patients fitted with Biohorizons® (Camlog Ibérica, Barcelona, Spain) implants with a conical morphology, straight neck, and internal hex connection by third-year master’s students, taught by the lecturers of the Master of Medicine, Surgery, and Oral Implantology course at the University of Barcelona between July 2015 and July 2018. All the prosthodontic rehabilitations were performed during the Master of Occlusion and Oral Rehabilitation course at the University of Barcelona.
Each patient’s clinical and radiographic data were collected from the medical records and the institution’s files. Once considered suitable, the medical histories were initially reviewed by AGD and JLL, with any discrepancies resolved by consulting with RAM. The medical histories were initially reviewed and were considered suitable if they contained clinical data for surgical and prosthetics during the follow-up period.
The following inclusion criteria were used: (i)—patient aged between 18 and 85 years; (ii)—all patients who were treated with Biohorizons® implants, with a conical morphology, straight neck, and internal hex connection in their different diameters and heights; (iii)—availability of each patient’s full medical history; (iv)—healthy patients or those with one or more of the following risk factors: autoimmune disease, osteoporosis, treatment with bisphosphonates, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, periodontal disease and/or allergy to drugs, smoking; (v)—patients who received implants in native bone or combined with bone regeneration; (vi)—availability of pre-operative, operative, and post-operative data, both immediately and after at least 6 months, along with check-ups at 12, 24, and 36 months where available, based on the prosthesis placement date after the implants were inserted; (vii)—availability of pre-, post-operative, and follow-up X-rays if contained in the medical history; (viii)—rehabilitated patients with fixed or removable prostheses.
Patients were excluded when: there was a lack of surgical and prosthetic data in the medical history; when the medical history was not in electronic format; if treated from 2018 onwards; surgeries were not performed by master’s students; patients with uncontrolled systemic disease; patients that did not provide informed consent to use their data on initiating treatment.
The variables were divided into 2 groups, the first group relating to the patient’s medical history and the second relating to surgery, prosthetic rehabilitation, and implant maintenance (Table 1).
-
Variables based on the patient’s medical history. Data and predisposing factors relating to the success of the implants described in the literature were studied, such as: (i)—age; (ii)—gender; (iii)—parafunctional habits; (iv)—the patient’s systemic condition: autoimmune disease, osteoporosis, treatment with bisphosphonates, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, periodontal disease, and/or allergy to drugs; (v)—smoking (<10 cigarettes a day/>10 cigarettes a day).
-
Variables relating to the surgery and implant data, the prosthetic load, and type of rehabilitation: (i)—Anatomical location. It was divided into four regions (anterior maxilla 1.4–2.4, posterior maxilla, anterior mandible 3.4–4.4, posterior mandible). (ii)—Implant characteristics: the implant diameter (mm) and height (mm) were evaluated. (iii)—Surgery characteristics: the implants were placed post-extraction, delayed, with prior or simultaneous regeneration surgeries (vertical or horizontal bone augmentation), and if sinus lift was necessary (lateral or atraumatic window). (iv)—Prosthetic load: it was described whether the load was immediate (24 h post), a delayed load (2–3 months), or a late load (6 months); (v)—Type of prosthesis: fixed or removable. (vi)—The implant survival was evaluated after verifying in the radiographic data and the clinical history if these were functionally stable at 6, 12, 24, and 36 months after loading. (vii)—Implant failure was considered when it was indicated to remove the implant due to some irreversible complication such as mobility and persistent pain; this, in turn, was divided into early failure (before prosthetic load) and late failure (after final prosthetic load).
-
Statistical analysis: Descriptive statistical parameters were used to evaluate the variables, which included standard deviation and percentage distribution. The chi-squared test was used to compare the qualitative data, with p = 0.05 considered as a significant value, expressed in frequency distribution tables. The Student’s t-test for independent samples was used to compare quantitative variables. An Excel table was used to process the data and version 26.0 of the IBM SPSS Statistics, IBM Corporation, Armonk, NY. program was used for the statistical analysis.

3. Results

After obtaining a list of 204 cases treated with Biohorizons® implants, the study focused on 192 patients due to the lack of clinical data for the surgery (seven patients) and an incorrectly filed history number (five patients). The results are presented below according to:

3.1. Gender and Age

As such, the analyzed data corresponded to 192 patients with 422 implants placed in total. With respect to gender, 98 cases were male (51.04%) and 94 cases were female (48.96%). Of the total number of implants (N = 422), 249 were placed in male and 173 in female. The average age of the patients was 54.5 ± 13 years old (range: 17–82 years old) at the time of surgery. Figure 1 shows the distribution of patients and the number of implants divided by age decades and gender. The higher percentages of patients treated with dental implants were in the 41-to-50-year-old (25.52%) and 51-to-60-year-old (25.00%) ranges; while most implants were placed in the 51–60- (26.03%) and 61–70-years-old (25.83%) ranges.

3.2. Medical History

The results regarding the clinical records of the patients are shown in Table 2. The only parafunctional habit described in the medical histories was bruxism, among 14.14% of cases (N = 27), with only one patient presenting the failure of one implant, p = 0.762, so the difference was not statistically significant. Of the 28.1% of patient cases (N = 68) with a history of periodontal disease, 3.7% presented failure on treatment with implants (N = 3), p = 0.920, so the difference was not statistically significant. When it comes to drug allergies, 11.02% of patients presented allergies to some type of drug, with allergies to penicillins the most frequent among 5.07% of cases (N = 11). Descriptions of the allergies reported in the patients are shown in Table 2. There was only one failure among a patient allergic to different drugs, with p < 0.0001. Other variables such as drug abuse were not found in this study. Patients with a known smoking habit were divided into those that smoked fewer than 10 cigarettes a day, 9.95% (N = 19), and those that smoked more than 10 cigarettes a day, 15.18% (N = 29). Of the nine failures, 5.9% presented in the first group and 3.8% (N = 1) in the second group, with no significant differences and p = 0.953.

3.3. The Distribution of Implants by Location

An average of 2.2 Biohorizons® brand implants were fitted per patient (range: 1–12). A total of 225 implants were placed in the superior maxilla (53.32%), 116 in the anterior sector up to the first premolar and 109 in the posterior sector, while in the mandible, there were 197 implants (46.68%), 60 in the anterior sector up to the first premolar and 137 in the posterior sector. The implants did not present statistically significant values in terms of the position regarding the arches, six failed in the maxilla (2.7% of the total of implants placed in the maxilla) and three in the mandible (1.5% of the total implants placed in the mandible), with p = 0.417. During the analysis of failure relating to the position of the implants between the anterior N = 7 (4.0%) and posterior N = 2 (0.8%) sectors, the results showed statistically significant differences with p = 0.027. The distribution of implants by location, diameter, and length is shown in Table 3, with the region of the first molar replaced most by implants, both superior and inferior. The most common length was 12 mm, N = 217 (51.42%), and the most used diameter was 3.8 mm, N = 237 (55.92%).

3.4. Type of Surgery and Rehabilitation

Surgery and prosthetic rehabilitation are described in (Table 4). A total of 54 implants were placed post-extraction, 22 of which had an immediate load. A total of 50 patients received a regeneration procedure in combination with placing implants. A total of 64% of cases were regenerated with a xenograft and collagen membrane (Bio-oss®-Bio-guide®, Inibsa Dental S.L.U, Lliçà de Vall-Barcelona, Spain), without specifying the type of regeneration. A total of 20 sinus lifts were performed; implant placement was delayed for 2 of them, with the other 18 placed simultaneously (14 with a lateral window and 4 with a transalveolar technique). A total of 8.5% (N = 5) of the total percentage of patients treated with dental implants and bone regeneration failed, which was not a statistically significant value, with p = 0.098.
When it comes to results based on the time of loading, 93 implants (22.04%) were rehabilitated immediately (24 h) with provisional prostheses. Only 11 implants (2,60%) were rehabilitated with an early load within a period of 2 to 3 months, and 269 (63.74%) implants had delayed loading (≥6 months), which was the longest time used to subject a load to the implant. There was no prosthetic load record for 18 patients, totaling 40 implants (9.48%). A fixed prosthesis was used most in 338 implants (80.09%), while the removable prosthesis was only used in 35 mandible implants (8.29%).

3.5. Type of Failure

Nine implants failed in nine patients (2.13%), 66.6% (N = 6) in male and 33.3% (N = 3) in female, with no statistically significant differences, p = 0.337. They were divided into early failures pre-prosthetic load (4 implants) with an average follow-up of 13 weeks (range: 4–20 weeks), 2 implants with early failures with an immediate load (4th and 8th week), and 3 implant failures after applying the definitive prosthetic load, with a mean follow-up of 16 weeks (range: 2–32 weeks). The results were statistically significant with p < 0.0001 for early failure compared to late failure. Early/late failure was also evaluated regarding implant position, also presenting statistically significant results for implants placed in the anterior region, with p = 0.014. Table 5; Table 6 show correlations between variables and failure. Table 7 summarizes the possible causes for explanation and the clinical characteristics.
The 373 implants with a prosthetic load record (excluding the 4 implants explanted after 199, placing the prosthesis) are currently functional.

4. Discussion

This cohort study conducted during the Master of Medicine, Surgery, and Oral Implantology course at the University of Barcelona on 192 patients treated with Biohorizons® dental implants concluded a 2.13% failure rate, in line with the percentages found in the literature [28,29], with a 97.87% survival rate across a range of 6 months to 3 years, a figure within the values established by most previous works. However, other investigations exposed higher failure rates in postgraduate students, between 3.9% and 16% [27,29].
The results found statistically significant values for implants that failed early (p < 0.0001), coinciding with some authors, who stated that the early failure rate is greater than the late failure rate [30,31]. This type of failure is attributed to the first phase of treatment, which covers variables such as patient condition, surgeon experience, the type of surgery, and post-operative care. The main causes include periodontal disease, smoking habit, surgical complications, surgeries at the same time as bone regeneration, a lack of primary stability, infections, high healing abutments, and immediate loads on occlusion [32,33]. However, these variables were not significant in our study; this may be due to the percentage of the sample that presented the evaluated risk factors, unlike research with larger sample sizes.
Implant failures relating to location on the arch did present statistically significant differences between the anterior/posterior sector and association with early failure, p = 0.027 and p = 0.014, respectively. There is no concordance between the prevalence of failure of implants based on location. There are studies to support the theory that the superior maxilla, on being a more porous bone and easier to reabsorb, presents more implant losses than the mandible [34,35]. As opposed to other investigators who explained that a higher failure rate occurs in the mandible region over the short-term, this is down to the cortical thickness and limited mandible vascularization [9].
Among the factors studied in this study, no statistically significant differences were presented regarding patient gender. The average age (54.5 ± 13 years old) is similar to the age in other retrospective studies conducted in universities with an average age of 54.4 years old [3,29,36], given that it corresponds to the patterns of incidence and prevalence when more tooth loss starts to occur [37].
As was already stated, the patient’s systemic condition and habits play a key role in the survival of implants over the short- and long-term. No significant differences were found between bruxism and implant failure. Although this study showed that patients with a history of periodontal disease did not present a higher level of implant failure compared to patients without a history of periodontal disease, studies with a larger sample size have suggested that periodontal disease is a risk factor for implant failure [21,22]. Our study did not find any statistically significant differences between patients that smoked <10/>10 cigarettes a day with implant failure and survival. However, investigation over time indicates a high risk of failure among patients with a frequency of over 15 cigarettes a day [3,38]. Currently, studies have shown that patients allergic to penicillin present higher early implant failure due to a lack of osseointegration and infection due to the effects of clindamycin on bone cells [39,40]. Although the results regarding patients allergic to penicillin were significant in our study, they should be treated with caution as the same patient presented allergy to all the studied drugs.
As was already mentioned, bone regeneration is classified as a risk factor [12,14]. The survival rate at 5 and 10 years for implants placed in regenerated regions drops from 90% to 79% compared to implants placed in native bone [41]. Our investigation presented a greater loss of implants when they were placed in combination with regenerative procedures, but without statistical significance (N = 5, with p = 0.098). Evaluating this risk factor in isolation is difficult, as other factors are in play that when taken in combination, leading to a worse prognosis of success and survival for implants. These include the patient’s systemic condition and smoking habit [24].
A total of 63.74% of implants were loaded late (≥6 months), with a fixed prosthesis the most used type, N = 338 (80.09%), while only 8.29% of implants N = 35 were used for mandible crowns. These data appear reasonable if we consider the average patient age. The study conducted by Balarezo et al. (2019) showed that there is a direct relationship between age and prosthesis type, whereby the frequency of single crowns and fixed prostheses was higher among patients aged 40 to 60 years old as the patients seen were mostly partially edentulous patients [42].
Being a retrospective study, one of the limitations was the possible bias during data collection, which was registered and validated by different researchers. Another limitation was not clinically evaluating each patient to corroborate the data obtained from the medical history. The nature of our study prevented us from studying some variables not described in the present investigation, such as drug abuse [43], use of probiotics, hyaluronic acid [44], and aloe vera [45], which can modify the clinical and microbiological parameters and influence the stability of the implant. All these variables should be considered in future clinical trials.

5. Conclusions

This study obtained a respective survival and failure rate of 97.87% and 2.13% for implants placed by students on the Master of Medicine, Surgery, and Oral Implantology course at the University of Barcelona over a period of 6 months to 3 years. The results showed that the survival and failure rates of implants placed by postgraduate students are similar to those obtained by experienced professionals, being an effective and predictable therapy for partially or edentulous patients.
Compared to late failure, early failure presented statistically significant differences of p < 0.0001. Additionally, there was a statistically significant association in the failure of implants in the anterior sector compared to the posterior sector, p < 0.027, and with early failure, p < 0.014.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, A.G.-D. and J.L.-L.; methodology, A.G.-D., R.A.-M., C.S.-H. and J.L.-L.; software C.S.-H.; validation, A.G.-D. and J.L.-L.; formal analysis, A.G.-D., R.A-M. and C.S.-H.; investigation, A.G.-D.; resources, M.B.-H. and P.R.-O.; data curation, C.S.-H., A.M.-R. and J.L.-L.; writing—original draft preparation, A.G.-D. and J.L.-L.; writing—review and editing, A.G.-D., A.M.-R. and J.L.-L.; visualization, M.B.-H. and A.M.-R.; supervision, J.L.-L., A.M.-R. and A.M.-R. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research received no external funding.

Institutional Review Board Statement

The study was conducted in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki, and approved by Ethics Committee of CEICm-HOUB [Dental Hospital of Barcelona University Ethics Committee] for studies involving humans. Protocol 7/2022. Provisional approval is agreed at the February 2022 meeting.

Informed Consent Statement

Informed consent was obtained from all subjects involved in the study.

Data Availability Statement

Data of obtained from this study is not available publicly. Information regarding these data should be requested to the corresponding author.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors state that this is an original work with no conflict of interest with any company.

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Figure 1. Implant distribution by gender and age range.
Figure 1. Implant distribution by gender and age range.
Applsci 12 02958 g001
Table 1. Variables’ descriptions. M: Male; F: Female; Type: Refers to the type of autoimmune disease: Lichen, Psoriasis, etc.
Table 1. Variables’ descriptions. M: Male; F: Female; Type: Refers to the type of autoimmune disease: Lichen, Psoriasis, etc.
Variables—Medical History Type of Variable
Age-Quantitative discrete
Gender(M/F)Qualitative dichotomous
Bruxism(Yes/No)Qualitative dichotomous
Autoimmune disease(Yes/No)//TypeNominal qualitative dichotomous
Osteoporosis(Yes/No)Qualitative dichotomous
Bisphosphonates(Yes/No)Qualitative dichotomous
Diabetes(Yes/No)//Type Nominal qualitative dichotomous
Cardiovascular disease(Yes/No)//Type Nominal qualitative dichotomous
Smoking habit(Yes/No)//(<10/>10 day)Ordinal qualitative dichotomous
Periodontal disease(Yes/No)Qualitative dichotomous
Allergy to drugs(Yes/No)//Type Nominal qualitative dichotomous
Implant-associated variables Type of variable
Anatomical location Anterior maxilla
Posterior maxilla
Anterior mandible
Posterior mandible
Nominal qualitative polychotomous
Implant diameter Quantitative discrete
Height Quantitative discrete
Surgical variables Type of variable
Post-extraction (Yes/No)Qualitative dichotomous
Delayed (Yes/No)Qualitative dichotomous
GBR(Yes/No)Qualitative dichotomous
Sinus augmentation(Yes/No)
Atraumatic//Delayed//
Simultaneous
Nominal qualitative polychotomous
Prosthetic load variables Type of variable
Immediate load(Yes/No)Qualitative dichotomous
Delayed load (Yes/No)Qualitative dichotomous
Late load (Yes/No)Qualitative dichotomous
Prosthesis post-load variables Type of variable
Type of prosthesis(Fixed/Removable)Qualitative dichotomous
Functional implant(Yes/No)Qualitative dichotomous
Explantation(Yes/No)//TypeNominal qualitative dichotomous
Table 2. Demographic data and medical histories of the sample. N: number; OII: number of implants. HIV: human immunodeficiency virus; NSAIDs: nonsteroidal anti-inflammatories.
Table 2. Demographic data and medical histories of the sample. N: number; OII: number of implants. HIV: human immunodeficiency virus; NSAIDs: nonsteroidal anti-inflammatories.
Variables N Patients/N of OIIPercentage
Gender-
-Male98/24951.04%/59%
-Female94/17348.96%/41%
Age ( X ¯ ± SD)-54.5 ± 13 -
Autoimmune diseases--
-Fibromyalgia42.09
-Lichen Planus10.52
Psoriasis21.04
HIV10.52
Osteoporosis 10.52
Bisphosphonates 42.09
Diabetes
Type 110.52
Type 2126.28
Gestational10.52
Cardiovascular diseases
Hypertension4724.6
Arrhythmias94.71
Chest angina52.61
Heart failure21.04
Ischemic heart disease10.52
Arterial occlusive disease10.52
Hypotension10.52
Aneurysm10.52
Cerebrovascular accident10.52
Stroke10.52
Myocardial infarction21.04
Valvulopathy10.52
Parafunctional habits
Bruxism2714.13
Periodontal disease6835.6
Smoking habit
<10 cigarettes a day199.94
>10 cigarettes a day2915.18
Allergy to drugs
Penicillins 115.75
Sulfamides21.04
Erythromycin10.52
NSAIDs42.09
Acetylsalicylic acid21.04
Metamizole21.04
Ethylenediamine10.52
Benzocaine10.52
Primperan10.52
Table 3. Implant distribution by location, diameter, and length. No. of OII: number of osteointegrated implants; Q: quadrant; F: frequency; D: diameter; L: length; OII: osseointegrated implant; NA: not applicable (the diameter and length of the implants were not classified by location).
Table 3. Implant distribution by location, diameter, and length. No. of OII: number of osteointegrated implants; Q: quadrant; F: frequency; D: diameter; L: length; OII: osseointegrated implant; NA: not applicable (the diameter and length of the implants were not classified by location).
Location No.
of OII
%1stQ
N° of OII/%
2ndQ
N° of OII/%
3rdQ
N° of OII/%
4thQ
N° of OII/%
DNo.
of OII
%LNo.
of OII
%
Maxilla2250.531.197.762.11110.13.133.04.133.093.0 mm194.56 mm 30.71
Anterior 1160.521.21412.072.2109.173.21111.04.21414.433.4 mm 174.037.5 mm 30.71
Posterior 1090.481.31512.932.3109.173.355.04.355.153.8 mm 23756.169 mm 348.06
Mandible1970.471.42118.012.42623.93.41010.04.499.284.6 mm 13331.5210.5 mm 15236.02
Anterior600.301.51613.792.52018.43.51515.04.51010.315.8 mm163.7912 mm 21751.42
Posterior1370.701.63429.312.62623.93.64646.04.64642.27NA NA NA 15 mm 122.84
1.776.032.765.53.71010.04.71010.31NANA NA18 mm10.24
Total422100 116100 109100 100100 97100Total422100 422100
Table 4. Characteristics of the surgery and prosthetic rehabilitation. GBR: guided bone regeneration.
Table 4. Characteristics of the surgery and prosthetic rehabilitation. GBR: guided bone regeneration.
Surgery Characteristics
-No. Patients/Total%No. Implants/Total%
Surgical periods----
Post-extraction implants 30/19215.63%53/42212.56%
Delayed implants 162/19284.38%369/42287.44%
Type of regeneration----
GBR32/19216.67%--
Bone expansion 8/1924.17%--
Chin graft 1/1920.52%--
Autologous graft 1/1920.52%--
Cytoplast 1/1920.52%--
Unspecified 6/1923.13%--
Sinus Lift----
Transcrestal 4/1922.08%--
Simultaneous with lateral window 14/1927.29%--
Delayed with lateral window 2/1921.04%--
Characteristics of the prosthetic rehabilitation
Load type ----
24 h immediate load 17/1928.85%93/42222.04%
Delayed load (2–3 months)9/1924.69%11/4222.60%
Late load (6 months)147/19276.56%269/42263.74%
Explantation 9/1924.69%9/4222.13%
No load recorded 18/1929.38%40/4229.48%
Type of prosthesis----
Fixed 162/19284.38%338/42280.09%
Removable 10/192 5.21%35/4228.29%
Table 5. Association between medical characteristics and implant failure.
Table 5. Association between medical characteristics and implant failure.
Demographics and Medical VariablesFailure
n = (%)
No Failure
n = (%)
p-Value
Gender
Male
Female
6 (6.1%)92 (93.9%)0.337
3 (3.2%)93 (96.8%)
Age9 (57.44 ± 14.8)183 (53.58 ± 13.4)0.403
Parafunctional habits 1 (3.6%)27 (96.4%)0.762
Autoimmune disease0 (0%)8 (100%)0.982
Osteoporosis 0 (0%)1 (100%)0.699
Bisphosphonates 0 (0%)4 (100%)0.904
Diabetes
Type 2
1 (8.3%)11 (91.7%)0.915
Cardiovascular disease
(Hypertension)
4 (14.8%)23 (85.2%)0.999
Periodontal disease 3 (4.5%)64 (95.5%)0.920
Allergy to drugs 1 (4%)24 (96%)0.0001 *
Smoking habits
<10 c/day
>10 c/day
1 (5.9%)16 (94.1%)0.953
1 (3.8%)25 (96.2%)
(*): statistically significant result.
Table 6. Association between implant location, regeneration, and type of implant failure.
Table 6. Association between implant location, regeneration, and type of implant failure.
Implant VariablesFailure n = (%)No Failure n = (%)p-Value
Location 0.417
 Maxilla6 (2.7%)219 (97.3%)
 Jaw3 (1.5%)194 (98.5%)
Location 0.014 *
 Anterior7 (4%)169 (96%)
 Posterior 2 (0.8%)244 (99.2%)
Regeneration 5 (8.5%)54 (91.5%)0.098
Type of failure: 0.0001 *
 Early6 (66.7%)0 (0%)
 Late3 (33.3%)0 (0%)
Type of failure related to implant position 169 (96%)0.027 *
 Anterior/early 6 (3.4%)
 Anterior/late1 (0.6%)
 Posterior/early0 (0%)244 (99.2%)
 Posterior/late2 (0,8%)
(*): statistically significant result
Table 7. Clinical characteristics of the failed implants. Dis: Disease; HTN: Hypertension; A: Penicillin, Tetracyclines, Streptomycin, Erythromycin, Lincomycin, Gentamicin, Sulfamethoxazole, Epinephrine, Chlorhexidine, Cobalt chloride and nickel chloride; S: Sulfamides; B: Bruxism; L: Location; D: Diameter; H: Height; PE: Post-extraction; F: Fibrointegration; VF: Vestibular fenestration; IR: Implant redirection.
Table 7. Clinical characteristics of the failed implants. Dis: Disease; HTN: Hypertension; A: Penicillin, Tetracyclines, Streptomycin, Erythromycin, Lincomycin, Gentamicin, Sulfamethoxazole, Epinephrine, Chlorhexidine, Cobalt chloride and nickel chloride; S: Sulfamides; B: Bruxism; L: Location; D: Diameter; H: Height; PE: Post-extraction; F: Fibrointegration; VF: Vestibular fenestration; IR: Implant redirection.
Case No.GenderAgeParafunctional HabitsAutoimmune Dis.OsteoporosisBisphosphonatesDiabetesCardiovascular Dis.Periodontal Dis.Allergy to DrugsSmoking HabitLDHSurgeryRegenerationReason for Failure/Type of Failure
1M43NoNoNoNoNoNoNoNoNo1.33.812Delayed-F (4th week)
2M56NoNoNoNoNoNoYesS<10 cig./day1.23.812Delayed-F (4th week)
3F67NoNoNoNoNoNoNoANo3.23.810.5DelayedBios oss®
Bio guide®
VF. Associated symptomatology (8th week)
4M36NoNoNoNoNoHTNNoNoNo3.63.89Delayed-IR (8 months post-load)
5M50NoNoNoNoNoNoYesNoNo2.64.612DelayedSimultaneous sinus liftPain, mobility, and bone loss (4 months post-load)
6M50BNoNoNoNoHTNYesNo>10 cig./day2.43.89Delayed-Implant mobility during prosthetic measurements (5 months)
7F59NoNoNoNoNoNoNoNoNo2.33.812PEBios oss®
Bio guide®
Implant mobility,
VF (2 weeks immediate post-load)
8F74NoNoNoNoType 2HTNNoNoNo3.43.412Delayed-F (8th week)
9M82NoNoNoNoNoHTNNoNoNo2.33.812PEYesMobility and percussion pain during prosthetic measurements (5 months)
(p = value)0.3370.4030.7620.9820.6990.9040.9150.9990.920<0.00010.9530.417/0.027 0.098<0.0001
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Graterol-Duran, A.; Ayuso-Montero, R.; Saka-Herrán, C.; Blazquez-Hinarejos, M.; Roca-Obis, P.; Marí-Roig, A.; López-López, J. Retrospective Study of Biohorizons® Implants Placed by Postgraduate Students at the University of Barcelona. Appl. Sci. 2022, 12, 2958. https://doi.org/10.3390/app12062958

AMA Style

Graterol-Duran A, Ayuso-Montero R, Saka-Herrán C, Blazquez-Hinarejos M, Roca-Obis P, Marí-Roig A, López-López J. Retrospective Study of Biohorizons® Implants Placed by Postgraduate Students at the University of Barcelona. Applied Sciences. 2022; 12(6):2958. https://doi.org/10.3390/app12062958

Chicago/Turabian Style

Graterol-Duran, Arianna, Raùl Ayuso-Montero, Constanza Saka-Herrán, Mónica Blazquez-Hinarejos, Paula Roca-Obis, Antonio Marí-Roig, and José López-López. 2022. "Retrospective Study of Biohorizons® Implants Placed by Postgraduate Students at the University of Barcelona" Applied Sciences 12, no. 6: 2958. https://doi.org/10.3390/app12062958

APA Style

Graterol-Duran, A., Ayuso-Montero, R., Saka-Herrán, C., Blazquez-Hinarejos, M., Roca-Obis, P., Marí-Roig, A., & López-López, J. (2022). Retrospective Study of Biohorizons® Implants Placed by Postgraduate Students at the University of Barcelona. Applied Sciences, 12(6), 2958. https://doi.org/10.3390/app12062958

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