Immediate Placement of Implants into Infected Sites: A Systematic Review
Chrcanovic,
B. R., Martins, M. D. and Wennerberg, A. (2013), Immediate Placement of
Implants into Infected Sites: A Systematic Review. Clinical Implant
Dentistry and Related Research. doi: 10.1111/cid.12098
Abstract
Background
Traditionally,
before placing dental implants, the compromised teeth are removed and
the extraction sockets are left to heal for several months. To preserve
the alveolar bone level from the collapse caused by healing and to
reduce treatment time in situations in which tooth extraction precedes
implant placement, some clinicians began to install the implant
immediately into the postextraction socket without waiting for the site
to heal.
Purpose
The
purpose of this study was to review the literature regarding treatment
outcomes of immediate implant placement into sites exhibiting pathology
after clinical procedures to perform the decontamination of the
implant's site. The following questions were raised: Does the presence
of periodontal or endodontic infection affect immediate implant
placement success? What is suggested to address the infection in the
socket prior to immediate placement?
Materials and Methods
An
electronic search in PubMed (U.S. National Library of Medicine,
Bethesda, MD, USA) was undertaken in March 2013. The titles and
abstracts from these results were read to identify studies within the
selection criteria. Eligibility criteria included both animal and human
studies, and excluded any review and case reports articles. The
publication's intervention had to have been implant placement into a
site classified as having an infection (periapical, endodontic,
perioendodontic, and periodontal).
Results
The
search strategy initially yielded 706 references. Thirty-two studies
were identified within the selection criteria, from which nine were case
reports and review articles and were excluded. Additional
hand-searching of the reference lists of selected studies yielded five
additional papers.
Conclusions
The
high survival rate obtained in several studies supports the hypothesis
that implants may be successfully osseointegrated when placed
immediately after extraction of teeth presenting endodontic and
periodontal lesions, provided that appropriate clinical procedures are
performed before the implant surgical procedure such as meticulous
cleaning, socket curettage/debridement, and chlorhexidine 0.12% rinse.
However, more randomized controlled clinical trials with a longer
follow-up are required to confirm this procedure as a safe treatment.
Moreover, the outcome measures were not related to the type of
infection; the classification of infection was often vague and varied
among the studies. The benefits of antibiotic solution irrigation and
systemic antibiotic administration in such conditions are not yet proved
and remain unclear.
Comments