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Journal ArticleDOI

The effect of material characteristics, of surface topography and of implant components and connections on soft tissue integration: a literature review.

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TLDR
To be functionally useful, oral implants have to pierce the gingiva or oral mucosa and enter the oral cavity, thus establishing a transmucosal connection between the external environment and the inner parts of the body.
Abstract
To be functionally useful, oral implants have to pierce the gingiva or oral mucosa and enter the oral cavity, thus establishing a transmucosal connection between the external environment and the inner parts of the body. In order to avoid bacterial penetration that could jeopardize either initial healing or long-term behaviour of implants, the formation of an early and long-standing effective barrier capable of biologically protecting the peri-implant structures is mandatory. The establishment of this soft tissue barrier is a critical part of tissue integration and is fundamentally the result of wound healing that has to establish an effective interface between living tissues and a foreign body. The soft tissue interface has been histologically assessed in animals and has a dimension of 3–4 mm in the apico-coronal direction called ‘biological width’. The interface consists of two zones, one of epithelium which covers about 2 mm of the surface, while the rest is devoted to connective tissue adhesion. Both these tissues contribute to the establishment of the so-called biological width, which may prevent oral bacteria and their products from penetrating into the body (Berglundh et al. 1991; Buser et al. 1992; Berglundh & Lindhe 1996; Abrahamsson et al. 1996, 1997, 1998a, 1998b; Cochran et al. 1997).

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Journal ArticleDOI

A review on the wettability of dental implant surfaces II: Biological and clinical aspects

TL;DR: This review provides a general overview of the available information about the contact angle values of experimental and of marketed implant surfaces, some of the techniques used to modify surface wettability of implants, and results from in vitro and clinical studies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Surface characteristics of dental implants: A review.

TL;DR: Different height, spatial, hybrid and functional roughness parameters have been identified as possible candidates able to predict the outcome at hard and soft tissue interfaces and hydrophilic implants have been proven to improve the initial blood contact, to support the wound healing and thereby accelerating the osseointegration.
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How do implant surface characteristics influence peri-implant disease?

TL;DR: It is revealed that only a few studies provided data on how implant surfaces influence peri-implant disease, and there is no evidence that implant surface characteristics can have a significant effect on the initiation of peri -implantitis.
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Zirconia dental implants: where are we now, and where are we heading?

TL;DR: Following numerous experimental studies, zirconium dioxide (zirconia) has earned its place as a potential substitute for titanium in implantology, yet, despite zIRconia's excellent biocompatibility and tissue integration, low affinity to plaque and favorable biomechanical properties, early failures were significantly higher for zirConia implants than for titanium implants.
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Dental Implant Systems

TL;DR: A novel implant system that integrates materials science and up-dated surface technology to improve dental implant systems exhibiting bio- and mechano-functionalities is proposed.
References
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A Light and Electron Microscopic Study

TL;DR: A tumor mass removed from the subcutaneous tissue of the shoulder of a dog had the light and electron microscopic features of extraneuraxial meningioma, and the meningiomatous nature of the lesion was confirmed by electron microscopy.
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The soft tissue barrier at implants and teeth

TL;DR: Analysis and comparisons made between the structure and composition of clinically healthy supraalveolar soft tissues adjacent to implants and teeth demonstrated that the periimplant mucosa which formed at titanium implants following abutment connection had many features in common with gingival tissue at teeth.
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Correlation between substratum roughness and wettability, cell adhesion, and cell migration

TL;DR: Electrolysis of chick embryo vascular and corneal explants grown on rough and smooth poly (methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) found that enhancement of the cell adhesion potential was related to the degree of roughness and the hydrophobicity.
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Dimension of the periimplant mucosa. Biological width revisited.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors determined the dimension of the mucosal-implant attachment at sites with insufficient width of the ridge mucosa and found that bone resorption was required to allow a stable soft tissue attachment to form.
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Crestal Bone Changes Around Titanium Implants. A Histometric Evaluation of Unloaded Non-Submerged and Submerged Implants in the Canine Mandible

TL;DR: These findings, as evaluated by non-decalcified histology under unloaded conditions, demonstrate that crestal bone changes occur during the early phase of healing after implant placement, and are dependent on the surface characteristics of the implant and the presence/absence of an interface.
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