Retrospective cohort assessment of survival and complications of zygomatic implants in atrophic maxillae.

Autor: Vrielinck, Luc, Moreno‐Rabie, Catalina, Coucke, Wim, Jacobs, Reinhilde, Politis, Constantinus
Předmět:
Zdroj: Clinical Oral Implants Research; Feb2023, Vol. 34 Issue 2, p148-156, 9p, 2 Color Photographs, 3 Charts, 1 Graph
Abstrakt: Objectives: To report on zygomatic implant (ZI) survival rate and associated complications through a longitudinal retrospective cohort assessment. Material and Methods: A total of 940 ZIs (rough: 781, machined: 159; immediate loading: 454, delayed loading: 486) and 451 standard implants (rough: 195, machined: 256; immediate loading: 58, delayed loading: 393) were placed in 302 adult patients with atrophic maxilla from December 1998 till September 2020. Following data collection reported complications were grouped based on their origin as infectious/ non‐infectious biological and mechanical. Statistical analysis was performed to identify risk factors and preceding complications leading to implant loss (P < 0.05). Results: The survival rate of ZI was found to be 89.9% and the average time between implant placement and an eventual loss was 4.8 years. The mean ZI follow‐up period was 7.9 ± 4.9 years. Amongst the infectious biological complications, sinusitis was the most reported (n = 138) occurring at a mean follow‐up time‐point of 4.5 years, whereas infraorbital nerve hypoesthesia occurred more frequently in the non‐infectious biological category (n = 8, meantime: 0.3 years). The prosthetic screw fracture was the most reported complication of mechanical origin (n = 29, meantime: 4 years). Furthermore, sinusitis, standard implant loss, zygomatic/peri‐zygomatic region infection, and oroantral communication were significantly associated with ZI loss. Conclusions: ZI placement offered a high survival rate for the rehabilitation of severely atrophied maxilla with most losses occurring within the first 5 years at follow‐up. The most frequently observed complication was sinusitis which tends to develop several years following implant placement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index