25 results on '"Enkling N"'
Search Results
2. Clinical Research CompetitionThe noninfluence of platform-switching on peri-implant crestal bone level alterations: 060
- Author
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Enkling, N, Albrecht, D, Gallo, N, Dürstler, M, Bayer, S, Stark, H, and Mericske-Stern, R
- Published
- 2011
3. Dimensional changes of mandibular dentures after integration of implant bars: 223
- Author
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Albrecht, D, Ramirez, A, Mericske-Stern, R, Bayer, S, Stark, H, and Enkling, N
- Published
- 2010
4. Bone resorption around self-tapping implants in boneclass I and II: 17
- Author
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Mericske-Stern, R, Enkling, N, Schilli, W, Jepsen, S, Bayer, S, and Jöhren, P
- Published
- 2010
5. Immediate loading of interforaminal implants using a chairside-fabricated bar: 069
- Author
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Enkling, N, Albrecht, D, Bayer, S, Stark, H, and Mericske-Stern, R
- Published
- 2010
6. Prevention of internal bacterial colonization of dental implants: A comparative longitudinal observational study.
- Author
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Jervøe-Storm PM, Jepsen S, Marder M, Kraus D, Stoilov M, and Enkling N
- Subjects
- Humans, Dental Materials, Bacteria, Bacterial Load, Dental Implants microbiology, Disinfectants, Peri-Implantitis microbiology
- Abstract
Objectives: Previous studies have indicated a progressive internal bacterial colonization of implants and possible implications for peri-implant bone loss. The aim of this study was to evaluate a decontamination protocol, two disinfectants, and a sealant for their ability to prevent such a colonization., Materials and Methods: Bacterial samples were harvested from the peri-implant sulcus (external) and following abutment removal from the implant cavity (internal) during routine supportive peri-implant care in 30 edentulous patients 2 years after they had obtained two implants. In a split-mouth design, implants were randomly assigned to receive either internal decontamination alone (10% H
2 O2 , brush) or additional placement of either sealant (GS), disinfectant agent (CHX-varnish) or disinfectant gel (1% CHX-gel), in the internal cavity before remounting of abutment/suprastructure. Twelve months later, internal and external sampling was repeated. Total bacterial counts (TBCs) were determined using real-time PCR in a total of 240 samples (eight per patient)., Results: Total bacterial counts in the internal cavity significantly reduced overall treatment modalities 1 year after the treatments (4.0 [2.3-6.9]-fold reduction; p = .000). No significant differences between the four treatment types were found (p = .348). Comparison of internal and external sampling points revealed significant correlation (R2 = .366; p = .000) with systematically higher TBC counts in external samples., Conclusions: Within the limitations of the present study, it can be concluded that the use of disinfectant agents or a sealant did not show an additional benefit in the prevention of internal bacterial colonization of implants compared to a decontamination protocol alone., (© 2023 The Authors. Clinical Oral Implants Research published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)- Published
- 2023
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7. Soft tissue response to different abutment materials: A controlled and randomized human study using an experimental model.
- Author
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Enkling N, Marder M, Bayer S, Götz W, Stoilov M, and Kraus D
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- Cytokines, Dental Implant-Abutment Design, Humans, Models, Theoretical, Titanium, Zirconium, Dental Abutments, Dental Implants
- Abstract
Objectives: Aim of this study was to compare the soft tissue response to implant abutments made of titanium, zirconia, zirconia veneered with feldspar ceramics and PEEK by various clinical, histological, microbiological, and molecular biological markers in an experimental model., Materials and Methods: A total of 40 experimental one-piece healing abutments of four different materials were mounted on bone level implants in 20 volunteering patients (split-mouth design). After a three-month period of open healing, clinical parameters at the abutments were assessed and adjacent mucosa was sampled for inflammatory cytokine mRNA concentrations and histological analysis by a novel method. In addition, PISF samples were obtained for the analysis of periodonto-pathogenic bacteria counts and active MMP-8 levels. Marginal bone level change was measured by intra oral radiographs., Results: Abutments of the different materials did not exhibit significant differences regarding clinical parameters, pathogenic bacteria counts or pro-inflammatory cytokine concentrations. Likewise, no significant differences were detected regarding soft tissue morphology or bone level change. Compared to titanium abutments, significantly less mononuclear inflammatory cells were detected in the mucosa at abutments made of zirconia veneered with feldspar ceramics., Conclusions: All examined abutment materials exhibited a similar soft tissue response compared to titanium and histological data did not reveal early signs of elevated inflammation caused by PEEK- and feldspar-veneered zirconia abutments. Due to the short observation period and the small sample size, a final conclusion on the long-term suitability of those abutment materials cannot be drawn. However, based on the presented data, we consider further studies on that subject as appropriate., (© 2022 The Authors. Clinical Oral Implants Research published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2022
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8. Influence of the loading protocol and platform switching in two-implant bar-retained overdentures: 3-year results from a randomized controlled equivalence clinical trial.
- Author
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Enkling N, Kokoschka F, Schumacher D, Kraus D, Schimmel M, and Abou-Ayash S
- Subjects
- Aged, Dental Prosthesis, Implant-Supported, Denture, Overlay, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Mandible diagnostic imaging, Mandible surgery, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Treatment Outcome, Alveolar Bone Loss, Dental Implants, Immediate Dental Implant Loading
- Abstract
Objectives: To test the null hypothesis that vertical peri-implant bone level alterations (ΔIBL) are equivalent in immediately (IL) and 3-month post-placement (DL) loaded implants in mandibular implant overdentures (IODs) on two implants., Materials and Methods: Thirty-two patients receiving two interforaminal implants, one with a platform-switched and one with a platform-matching abutment were randomly assigned to the IL or DL group (allocation ratio 1:1). All implants were primarily splinted with chairside-customized bars, converting the existing removable complete dentures to IODs. Standardized radiographs were recorded. The influence of the loading protocol (IL vs. DL), implant platform (platform switched vs. platform matching), implant site (43 vs. 33), participant age (≤65 vs. >65 years), and definition of baseline (implant placement vs. implant loading) were analyzed, applying linear regression analyses (α = 0.05). The equivalence range was [-0.4; 0.4]., Results: Three participants of the IL group were lost during follow-up. The overall mean ΔIBL was -0.96 ± 0.89 mm. The ΔIBL was equivalent in terms of the implant platform and implant site but not in terms of participant age (in favor of more elderly participants) and the loading protocol. A significantly smaller ΔIBL was observed in the IL when the baseline was considered to be implant placement (p = .017), but not when it was considered to be implant loading (p = .084)., Conclusion: Immediate loading of primary-splinted implants in two-implant bar-retained overdentures, seems beneficial relative to loading 3 months post-placement, with respect to ΔIBL. The ΔIBL were equivalent in terms of platform switching., (© 2021 The Authors. Clinical Oral Implants Research published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2022
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9. Short strategic implants for mandibular removable partial dentures: One-year results from a pilot randomized crossover abutment type study.
- Author
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Enkling N, Nauli J, Kraus D, Wittneben JG, Schimmel M, and Abou-Ayash S
- Subjects
- Cross-Over Studies, Dental Abutments, Dental Prosthesis, Implant-Supported, Humans, Pilot Projects, Random Allocation, Dental Implants, Denture, Partial, Removable
- Abstract
Objectives: The present pilot study analyzed two abutment types (a retentive ball and a non-retentive dome) in implant-assisted removable partial dentures (IARPDs) on 6 mm short implants with respect to clinical, radiological, and patient-reported outcomes (PROs), during the first year., Materials and Methods: Two implants were placed bilaterally in mandibular molar sites, converting existing free-end removable partial dentures (RPDs) to IARPDs. Twelve subjects were randomized to initially receive either the dome (Group A, n = 6) or the ball abutment (Group B, n = 6). After eight weeks, the abutments were exchanged. After another 8 weeks, the participants were given the choice of one of the abutments. Mean values and standard deviations (SD) were calculated, and random-effect linear regression analyses were applied to analyze marginal bone level alterations and PROs (α < .05)., Results: Twelve participants were included in the study; however, one dropout occurred. Patient ratings increased significantly in both study groups. The majority of the participants (82%) ultimately chose the ball abutment. The implant survival rate was 100%, and the success rate was 90.9% twelve months after implant placement (mean peri-implant bone-loss: -1.2; SD: 0.6 mm) without a statistically significant difference between the study groups, in terms of clinical- and radiological outcomes., Conclusion: Placing 6 mm short implants at mandibular molar sites of RPD wearers seems to be a viable treatment option, based on this investigation with a short-term follow-up. Although only minor differences between the two abutments were observed, patients seem to prefer the ball over the dome abutment., (© 2021 The Authors. Clinical Oral Implants Research published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2021
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10. Comparison of irrigation protocols for the internal decontamination of dental implants-results of in vitro and in vivo studies.
- Author
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Jervøe-Storm PM, Hablützel AS, Bartels P, Kraus D, Jepsen S, and Enkling N
- Subjects
- Bacteria, Bacterial Load, Chlorhexidine, Decontamination, Humans, Dental Implants, Peri-Implantitis prevention & control
- Abstract
Objectives: Previous investigations have shown a progressive bacterial colonization of the internal cavities of two-piece dental implants with possible implications for peri-implant bone loss. The aim of the study was to compare different irrigation protocols for the internal decontamination of implants in vitro and in vivo., Materials and Methods: In the in vitro part, 80 samples were obtained 24 h after inoculation with an aliquot of subgingival bacteria from 40 implants as follows: before and after either cleaning with a brush and an irrigation solution (irrigation-brush-irrigation: test) or repeated irrigation alone (irrigation-irrigation: control). In the clinical study, 40 samples from twenty partially edentulous patients contributing each with one implant were collected after removal of abutment and suprastructure with sterile paper points immediately before and after decontamination and subsequently analyzed for total bacterial counts (TBC) by real-time-PCR. Irrigation solutions were chlorhexidine (0.2% (CHX)), H
2 O2 (10%), alcohol (70%, (ALC)), and NaCl (0.9%). Differences in proportional reduction of TBC between the four irrigation solutions were analyzed., Results: Irrigation with H2 O2 showed the highest effect in both parts of the study (relative TBC reduction in vitro: H2 O2 : 87.1%, CHX: 56.9%, ALC: 43.7%, NaCl: 42.7%; in vivo: H2 O2 : 51.4%, ALC: 30.4%, NaCl: 26.3%, CHX: 7.1%). The additional use of a brush showed no beneficial effect (p = 0.088). Overall, H2 O2 was superior to all other irrigation solutions with regard to relative TBC reduction., Conclusions: The present results indicate the potential of an irrigation protocol that includes a 10% H2 O2 solution for the internal decontamination of implants. (ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01917305)., (© 2021 The Authors. Clinical Oral Implants Research published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)- Published
- 2021
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11. Novel method to obtain human non-separated histological samples for the assessment of peri-implant soft tissue response: A feasibility study.
- Author
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Kraus D, Götz W, Bayer S, Frentzen M, Marder M, Albrecht D, and Enkling N
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- Feasibility Studies, Humans, Mandible, Titanium, Dental Abutments, Dental Implants
- Abstract
Objectives: To introduce a standardized and less invasive clinical model that provides histological information on the abutment-mucosa interface in humans., Materials and Methods: New experimental healing abutments were left in an open healing position on bone-level implants in the interforaminal region of the mandibles in six edentulous patients. The one-piece abutments were hollow cylinder-shaped with two lateral openings that allow for ingrowth of the peri-implant mucosa into the central abutment cavity. After three months of healing, abutments and ingrown mucosa were sampled and processed for histological analysis in a non-separated resin-embedding technique. To test the validity of the new model, the ingrown tissue was compared to the peri-implant mucosa around the same samples., Results: None of the experimental abutments exhibited signs of failure, and all samples showed mucosal ingrowth to the inner-abutment cavity. Comparison of ingrown tissue and peri-implant mucosa revealed no significant differences regarding the traits: tissue morphology, quality of collagen fibers, and adherence to the abutment. Ingrown mucosa exhibited a tendency for higher leukocyte infiltration., Conclusions: The presented model is a promising approach to reduce invasiveness during the sampling process for human non-separated abutment biopsies., (© 2021 The Authors. Clinical Oral Implants Research published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2021
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12. Platform switching in two-implant bar-retained mandibular overdentures: 1-year results from a split-mouth randomized controlled clinical trial.
- Author
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Abou-Ayash S, Schimmel M, Kraus D, Mericske-Stern R, Albrecht D, and Enkling N
- Subjects
- Dental Implantation, Endosseous, Dental Prosthesis, Implant-Supported, Denture, Overlay, Mandible surgery, Mouth, Treatment Outcome, Alveolar Bone Loss, Dental Implants, Immediate Dental Implant Loading
- Abstract
Objectives: The concept of platform switching is widely applied in current implant dentistry; however, the influence on peri-implant bone-level alterations (ΔIBL), especially in the field of implant overdentures (IODs), remains inconclusive. Therefore, the present study aimed to test the alternative hypothesis that there is an equivalent ΔIBLs at platform-switching and platform-matching implant abutments in 2-implant bar-retained IODs., Materials and Methods: Two interforaminal implants were placed in 32 subjects, who were randomly assigned to either an immediate- or a 3-month post-placement loading group. Furthermore, one implant in each subject was randomly assigned to receive a platform-switched abutment (test), and one a platform-matching abutment (control). The implants were splinted with prefabricated, chairside customized bars. ΔIBL was recorded by using customized radiograph holders at implant placement, implant loading, 3 months, 6 months, and 12 months after loading., Results: After 1 year, equivalent ΔIBL could be identified (test: -0.51 mm ± 0.49 versus control: -0.56 mm ± 0.52; p < .001). ΔIBL increased over time and was more pronounced in the delayed-loaded implants (-0.87 mm ± 0.61) relative to the immediately loaded implants (-0.35 mm ± 0.43; p = .022)., Conclusions: The prosthetic concept of platform switching does not necessarily lead to reduced bone loss. Immediate-loading of implants, primarily splinted with a bar, might be beneficial regarding peri-implant bone-level alterations over a short-term period., (© 2020 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2020
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13. Clinical outcomes and bone-level alterations around one-piece mini dental implants retaining mandibular overdentures: 5-year follow-up of a prospective cohort study.
- Author
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Enkling N, Moazzin R, Geers G, Kokoschka S, Abou-Ayash S, and Schimmel M
- Subjects
- Dental Prosthesis, Implant-Supported, Denture Retention, Denture, Overlay, Follow-Up Studies, Mandible, Prospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Dental Implants, Jaw, Edentulous
- Abstract
Objectives: To report on the clinical outcomes of one-piece mini dental implants (MDIs) retaining mandibular implant overdentures (IODs), including marginal bone-level alterations (ΔMBLs), clinical peri-implant parameters, and technical- and biological complications during a 5-year follow-up. The null hypothesis was that ΔMBLs would be equal in subjects older than 65 years relative to younger subjects., Materials and Methods: Four 1.8-mm diameter one-piece MDIs with ball attachments were placed in the interforaminal region of 20 edentulous subjects. The existing complete dentures were converted to IODs. Standardized radiographs of each implant were taken at implant placement (baseline) and during the five-year follow-up. ΔMBLs and potential influencing factors were evaluated, and peri-implant parameters, and biological and technical complications were recorded., Results: The implant and prosthetic survival rates were both 100%. IODs fractured in seven participants. The overall mean ΔMBL after 5 years was -1.18 mm (standard deviation: 0.79 mm). ΔMBLs per month were most pronounced within the first 3 months after implant placement. ΔMBLs were not influenced by the implant location, the presence of keratinized mucosa, or gender. However, ΔMBLs were significantly smaller in subjects older than 65 years (p = .007)., Conclusions: One-piece MDIs retaining mandibular IODs with O-ring attachments are a predictable treatment option, providing stable peri-implant bone and soft tissue conditions over a mid-term follow-up. Incorporating a metal reinforcement can prevent denture fracturing when converting a complete denture into an IOD. The presence of keratinized mucosa does not necessarily lead to decreased bone-level changes. Advanced age might be beneficial in terms of peri-implant bone stability., (© 2020 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2020
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14. A prospective cohort study on survival and success of one-piece mini-implants with associated changes in oral function: Five-year outcomes.
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Enkling N, Haueter M, Worni A, Müller F, Leles CR, and Schimmel M
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- Aged, Dental Prosthesis, Implant-Supported, Denture, Overlay, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Mandible, Prospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Dental Implants, Mouth, Edentulous
- Abstract
Objective: To investigate in a prospective cohort study the 5-year post-loading survival and success of one-piece mini dental implants (MDIs) in edentulous subjects with mandibular implant overdentures (IODs) and to report the associated changes of oral function with respect to patient age., Materials and Methods: Independently living edentulous patients were recruited and provided with new complete dentures. After an adaptation period, four one-piece MDIs (diameter 1.8 mm) were installed in the interforaminal region and immediately loaded. At baseline pre-operative (BL), as well as at 1-year and 5-year follow-up examinations, chewing efficiency was assessed with a validated color-mixing ability test and maximum voluntary bite force (MBF) was recorded with a digital force gauge. Implant survival and success were evaluated at 5-year follow-up. Non-parametric tests served to analyze the differences between time points., Results: Twenty patients participated in the study (5 men and 15 women; age at BL: n = 10 ≤ 65 years and n = 10 > 65 years). All patients were available for a 5-year follow-up (n = 2 in their long-term care facility; n = 1 only by telephone). The survival and success rates were both 100% after 61 ± 5.7 months. Chewing efficiency did not change over the first year (p = 0.167), but was improved at 5 year fup (n = 19) compared to baseline (p = 0.033) and to 1 year (p < 0.001). The MBF (n = 19 at 5-year follow-up) increased continuously over time (p < 0.001), but was less pronounced in the older cohort (p = 0.009)., Conclusions: Mini dental implants seem to be a successful treatment option for edentulous elderly patients with very high survival and success rates, and serve to improve long-term oral function., (© 2019 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2019
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15. Chewing efficiency, bite force and oral health-related quality of life with narrow diameter implants - a prospective clinical study: results after one year.
- Author
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Enkling N, Saftig M, Worni A, Mericske-Stern R, and Schimmel M
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Alveolar Ridge Augmentation, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Patient Satisfaction, Postoperative Complications diagnosis, Bite Force, Dental Implants, Dental Prosthesis Design, Mastication, Oral Health, Quality of Life
- Abstract
Objective: This prospective study aimed to investigate the evolution of chewing efficiency, maximum voluntary bite force (MBF) and oral health-related quality of life (OHRQoL) in edentulous patients treated with narrow diameter implants (NDIs) over the course of 1 year., Materials and Methods: Four NDIs (MDI
® , 3M ESPE, diameter 1.8 mm) were placed interforaminally in 20 edentulous patients. They were immediately loaded by converting the existing prosthesis into an implant overdenture. Participants were examined six times pre- and postoperatively [baseline (BL) to week 52 (w52)]. Chewing efficiency was evaluated with a colour-mixing ability test by evaluation of the standard deviation of hue (VOH, ViewGum©). MBF was measured using a digital force gauge. OHRQoL was determined with the Oral Health Impact Profile (OHIPG49). Nonparametric Brunner-Langer models were applied for statistical testing., Results: The study failed to demonstrate an effect on chewing efficiency. MBF increased continuously during the observation period (medians: MBF[N]@BL = 46.6 [iqr 50.1]; MBF[N]@w52 = 103.9 [iqr 76.0]; P = 0.002). OHRQoL increased steeply after implant loading and continued improving (medians: BL ∑OHIPG49 = 31 [iqr 40.0]; w4 ∑OHIPG49 = 11.5 [iqr 19.5]; w52 ∑OHIPG49 = 6 [iqr 13.0], P < 0.001)., Conclusions: The stabilisation of a lower complete prosthesis with four NDIs is a feasible minimally invasive and economical approach to improve oral function and OHRQoL, especially in elderly patients with limited bone support. Functional benefits might be more evident if patients receive chewing instructions. Larger studies need to confirm a positive effect on chewing efficiency and develop long-term maintenance solutions if patients become frail because no easy downgrading approaches of one-piece titanium implants exist., (© 2016 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)- Published
- 2017
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16. Bone resorption in different parts of the mandible in patients restored with an implant overdenture. A retrospective radiographic analysis.
- Author
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Kremer U, Schindler S, Enkling N, Worni A, Katsoulis J, and Mericske-Stern R
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- Aged, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Jaw, Edentulous rehabilitation, Male, Radiography, Panoramic, Retrospective Studies, Alveolar Bone Loss diagnostic imaging, Alveolar Bone Loss pathology, Bone Resorption diagnostic imaging, Bone Resorption pathology, Dental Prosthesis, Implant-Supported, Denture, Complete, Denture, Overlay, Mandible diagnostic imaging, Mandible pathology
- Abstract
Aim: This study investigated the pattern of resorption of the mandibular ridge under implant-supported overdentures., Material and Methods: Files of 60 patients were available for analysis (45 women and 15 men, mean age at the time of the follow-up 76.5 ± 8.5 years, 54 patients restored with bars, 6 with ball anchors). A baseline was defined by different stable landmarks and quartered. Linear measurements from this baseline at different clinical relevant sites approximately at: (i) the area close to the mental foramen/close to the implant, (ii) the chewing center, and (iii) the distal edge of the denture flange were carried out on rotational tomograms (OPTs). The OPTs were taken after prosthetic restoration and at an individual follow-up time (mean 11 ± 4.75 years). The known implant length served to scale each measurement to avoid any distortion errors., Results: The resorption rate showed a high individual variation, but among the three sites, the difference was highly significant. Median values of site (i) left = -0.07 mm/right = +0.05 mm, site (ii) left = -0.60 mm/right = -0.55 mm, and site (iii) left = -1.58 mm/right = -2.01 mm., Conclusions: The load of the distal flange of a mandibular implant overdenture increases bone resorption as a local factor, whereas implants may help to prevent resorption in the neighboring bone. An individual-adapted follow-up protocol should be established for each patient restored with an implant overdenture., (© 2014 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2016
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17. Internal bacterial colonization of implants: association with peri-implant bone loss.
- Author
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Jervøe-Storm PM, Jepsen S, Jöhren P, Mericske-Stern R, and Enkling N
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- Adult, Aged, Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans isolation & purification, Alveolar Bone Loss prevention & control, Bacterial Load, Female, Fusobacterium nucleatum isolation & purification, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Middle Aged, Peri-Implantitis prevention & control, Porphyromonas gingivalis isolation & purification, Prevotella intermedia isolation & purification, Prospective Studies, Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction, Tannerella forsythia isolation & purification, Treponema denticola isolation & purification, Alveolar Bone Loss microbiology, Dental Implants microbiology, Peri-Implantitis microbiology
- Abstract
Objectives: The aim of the present longitudinal study was to investigate bacterial colonization of the internal implant cavity and to evaluate a possible association with peri-implant bone loss., Methods: A total of 264 paper point samples were harvested from the intra-implant cavity of 66 implants in 26 patients immediately following implant insertion and after 3, 4, and 12 months. Samples were evaluated for Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans, Fusobacterium nucleatum, Porphyromonas gingivalis, Prevotella intermedia, Treponema denticola, and Tannerella forsythia as well as total bacterial counts by real-time PCR. Bone loss was evaluated on standardized radiographs up to 25 months after implant insertion. For the statistical analysis of the data, mixed effects models were fitted., Results: There was an increase in the frequency of detection as well as in the mean counts of the selected bacteria over time. The evaluation of the target bacteria revealed a significant association of Pr. intermedia at 4 and 12 months with peri-implant bone loss at 25 months (4 months: P = 0.009; 12 months: P = 0.021)., Conclusions: The present study could demonstrate a progressive colonization by periodontopathogenic bacteria in the internal cavities of two-piece implants. The results suggest that internal colonization with Pr. intermedia was associated with peri-implant bone loss., (© 2014 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2015
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18. Space requirement of a prefabricated bar on two interforaminal implants: a prospective clinical study.
- Author
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Albrecht D, Ramierez A, Kremer U, Katsoulis J, Mericske-Stern R, and Enkling N
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- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Humans, Jaw, Edentulous surgery, Male, Mandible surgery, Mastication, Middle Aged, Patient Satisfaction, Prospective Studies, Surveys and Questionnaires, Switzerland epidemiology, Dental Implantation, Endosseous, Dental Implants, Dental Prosthesis, Implant-Supported methods, Denture Retention instrumentation, Denture, Complete, Lower
- Abstract
Objectives: This clinical study measured the dimensional changes of existing lower complete dentures due to the integration of a prefabricated implant bar. Additionally, the impact of this dimensional change on patient satisfaction and oral function was analyzed., Methods: Twenty edentulous patients (10 men/10 women; aged 65.9 ± 11.8 years) received two interforaminal implants. Subsequent to surgery, a chair side adapted, prefabricated bar (SFI Bar(®), C+M, Biel, Switzerland) was inserted, and the matrix was polymerized into the existing lower denture. The change of the denture's lingual dimension was recorded by means of a bicolored, silicone denture duplicate that was sectioned in the oro-vestibular direction in the regions of the symphysis (S) and the implants (I-left, I-right). On the sections, the dimensional increase was measured using a light microscope. Six months after bar insertion, patients answered a standardized questionnaire., Results: All dentures exhibited increased lingual volume, more extensively at S than at I (P = 0.001). At S, the median diagonal size of the denture was doubled (+4.33 mm), and at I, the median increase was 50% (I-left/-right = +2.66/+2.62 mm). The original denture size influenced the volume increase (P = 0.024): smaller dentures led to a larger increase. The amount of denture increase did not have negative impact on either self-perceived oral function or patient satisfaction. Approximately, 95% of the patients were satisfied with the treatment results., Conclusions: The lingual size of a lower denture was enlarged by the integration of a prefabricated bar without any negative side effects. Thus, this attachment system is suitable to convert an existing full denture into an implant-supported overdenture., (© 2013 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2015
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19. In vitro precision of fit of computer-aided designed and computer-aided manufactured titanium screw-retained fixed dental prostheses before and after ceramic veneering.
- Author
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Katsoulis J, Mericske-Stern R, Enkling N, Katsoulis K, and Blatz MB
- Subjects
- Ceramics, Dental Stress Analysis, Denture Design, Denture Precision Attachment, In Vitro Techniques, Materials Testing, Microscopy, Electron, Scanning, Titanium, Bone Screws, Computer-Aided Design, Dental Prosthesis, Implant-Supported, Dental Veneers, Denture, Partial, Fixed
- Abstract
Objective: To compare the precision of fit of full-arch implant-supported screw-retained computer-aided designed and computer-aided manufactured (CAD/CAM) titanium-fixed dental prostheses (FDP) before and after veneering. The null-hypothesis was that there is no difference in vertical microgap values between pure titanium frameworks and FDPs after porcelain firing., Materials and Methods: Five CAD/CAM titanium grade IV frameworks for a screw-retained 10-unit implant-supported reconstruction on six implants (FDI tooth positions 15, 13, 11, 21, 23, 25) were fabricated after digitizing the implant platforms and the cuspid-supporting framework resin pattern with a laser scanner (CARES(®) Scan CS2; Institut Straumann AG, Basel, Switzerland). A bonder, an opaquer, three layers of porcelain, and one layer of glaze were applied (Vita Titankeramik) and fired according to the manufacturer's preheating and fire cycle instructions at 400-800 °C. The one-screw test (implant 25 screw-retained) was applied before and after veneering of the FDPs to assess the vertical microgap between implant and framework platform with a scanning electron microscope. The mean microgap was calculated from interproximal and buccal values. Statistical comparison was performed with non-parametric tests., Results: All vertical microgaps were clinically acceptable with values <90 μm. No statistically significant pairwise difference (P = 0.98) was observed between the relative effects of vertical microgap of unveneered (median 19 μm; 95% CI 13-35 μm) and veneered FDPs (20 μm; 13-31 μm), providing support for the null-hypothesis. Analysis within the groups showed significantly different values between the five implants of the FDPs before (P = 0.044) and after veneering (P = 0.020), while a monotonous trend of increasing values from implant 23 (closest position to screw-retained implant 25) to 15 (most distant implant) could not be observed (P = 0.169, P = 0.270)., Conclusions: Full-arch CAD/CAM titanium screw-retained frameworks have a high accuracy. Porcelain firing procedure had no impact on the precision of fit of the final FDPs. All implant microgap measurements of each FDP showed clinically acceptable vertical misfit values before and after veneering. Thus, the results do not only show accurate performance of the milling and firing but show also a reproducible scanning and designing process., (© 2013 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2015
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20. Precision of fit and retention force of cast non-precious-crowns on standard titanium implant-abutment with different design and height.
- Author
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Enkling N, Ueda T, Gholami H, Bayer S, Katsoulis J, and Mericske-Stern R
- Subjects
- Cementation, Dental Alloys, Dental Prosthesis Retention, Humans, In Vitro Techniques, Rotation, Surface Properties, Titanium, Crowns, Dental Abutments, Dental Prosthesis Design, Dental Prosthesis, Implant-Supported, Prosthesis Fitting methods
- Abstract
Objective: The cost-effectiveness of cast nonprecious frameworks has increased their prevalence in cemented implant crowns. The purpose of this study was to assess the effect of the design and height of the retentive component of a standard titanium implant abutment on the fit, possible horizontal rotation and retention forces of cast nonprecious alloy crowns prior to cementation., Materials and Methods: Two abutment designs were examined: Type A with a 6° taper and 8 antirotation planes (Straumann Tissue-Level RN) and Type B with a 7.5° taper and 1 antirotation plane (SICace implant). Both types were analyzed using 60 crowns: 20 with a full abutment height (6 mm), 20 with a medium abutment height (4 mm), and 20 with a minimal (2.5 mm) abutment height. The marginal and internal fit and the degree of possible rotation were evaluated by using polyvinylsiloxane impressions under a light microscope (magnification of ×50). To measure the retention force, a custom force-measuring device was employed., Statistical Analysis: one-sided Wilcoxon rank-sum tests with Bonferroni-Holm corrections, Fisher's exact tests, and Spearman's rank correlation coefficient., Results: Type A exhibited increased marginal gaps (primary end-point: 55 ± 20 μm vs. 138 ± 59 μm, P < 0.001) but less rotation (P < 0.001) than Type B. The internal fit was also better for Type A than for Type B (P < 0.001). The retention force of Type A (2.49 ± 3.2 N) was higher (P = 0.019) than that of Type B (1.27 ± 0.84 N). Reduction in abutment height did not affect the variables observed., Conclusion: Less-tapered abutments with more antirotation planes provide an increase in the retention force, which confines the horizontal rotation but widens the marginal gaps of the crowns. Thus, casting of nonprecious crowns with Type A abutments may result in clinically unfavorable marginal gaps., (© 2013 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by Blackwell Publishing Ltd.)
- Published
- 2014
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21. Precision of fit of implant-supported screw-retained 10-unit computer-aided-designed and computer-aided-manufactured frameworks made from zirconium dioxide and titanium: an in vitro study.
- Author
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Katsoulis J, Mericske-Stern R, Rotkina L, Zbären C, Enkling N, and Blatz MB
- Subjects
- Biomechanical Phenomena, Bone Screws, Humans, In Vitro Techniques, Lasers, Materials Testing, Microscopy, Electron, Scanning, Titanium, Zirconium, Computer-Aided Design, Dental Prosthesis Design, Dental Prosthesis, Implant-Supported, Prosthesis Fitting instrumentation
- Abstract
Objective: To analyze the precision of fit of implant-supported screw-retained computer-aided-designed and computer-aided-manufactured (CAD/CAM) zirconium dioxide (ZrO) frameworks., Materials and Methods: Computer-aided-designed and computer-aided-manufactured ZrO frameworks (NobelProcera) for a screw-retained 10-unit implant-supported reconstruction on six implants (FDI positions 15, 13, 11, 21, 23, 25) were fabricated using a laser (ZrO-L, N = 6) and a mechanical scanner (ZrO-M, N = 5) for digitizing the implant platform and the cuspid-supporting framework resin pattern. Laser-scanned CAD/CAM titanium (TIT-L, N = 6) and cast CoCrW-alloy frameworks (Cast, N = 5) fabricated on the same model and designed similar to the ZrO frameworks were the control. The one-screw test (implant 25 screw-retained) was applied to assess the vertical microgap between implant and framework platform with a scanning electron microscope. The mean microgap was calculated from approximal and buccal values. Statistical comparison was performed with non-parametric tests., Results: No statistically significant pairwise difference was observed between the relative effects of vertical microgap between ZrO-L (median 14 μm; 95% CI 10-26 μm), ZrO-M (18 μm; 12-27 μm) and TIT-L (15 μm; 6-18 μm), whereas the values of Cast (236 μm; 181-301 μm) were significantly higher (P < 0.001) than the three CAD/CAM groups. A monotonous trend of increasing values from implant 23 to 15 was observed in all groups (ZrO-L, ZrO-M and Cast P < 0.001, TIT-L P = 0.044)., Conclusions: Optical and tactile scanners with CAD/CAM technology allow for the fabrication of highly accurate long-span screw-retained ZrO implant-reconstructions. Titanium frameworks showed the most consistent precision. Fit of the cast alloy frameworks was clinically inacceptable., (© 2012 John Wiley & Sons A/S.)
- Published
- 2014
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22. Retention force of plastic clips on implant bars: a randomized controlled trial.
- Author
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Bayer S, Komor N, Kramer A, Albrecht D, Mericske-Stern R, and Enkling N
- Subjects
- Aged, Benzophenones, Dental Prosthesis Design, Dental Stress Analysis, Female, Humans, Ketones, Male, Middle Aged, Plastics, Polyethylene Glycols, Polymers, Prospective Studies, Single-Blind Method, Treatment Outcome, Dental Prosthesis, Implant-Supported, Denture Retention instrumentation, Denture, Overlay
- Abstract
Objectives: Retention of overdentures is important for patients' satisfaction. The study tested whether the clinical performance of retentive clips made of poly-ether-ether-ketone (PEEK) is superior to those made of poly-oxy-methylene (POM)., Methods: A total of 30 patients received complete dentures with round bars (SFI-Bar) on two implants in a chairside technique. Two types of clip matrices (PEEK/POM) were used in a split-mouth technique. Retention forces were measured separately for both materials at baseline when the dentures were inserted and after 1, 3 and 6 months. The measurement was performed extraorally and intraorally by using a measuring stylus equipped, respectively, with an opposing matrix or bar part. Simultaneously, at each point in time the patient and the dentist judged the retention either to be good, or to be too high or too low. Statistical analysis involved performance of global non-parametric testing of dependence of retention force on time and material was performed with Brunner-Langer model; non-parametric 95% confidence intervals (CIs) were calculated., Results: At baseline the median force for POM matrices was 6.89N (95% CI: 6.50-8.21) and for PEEK matrices 7.17N (95% CI: 6.97-7.93). After 6 months, the retention of POM decreased to 5.53N (95% CI: 4.81-7.00) and of PEEK to 6.42N (95% CI: 5.15-7.51). The retention force changed significantly over time (P = 0.004) without differences between POM and PEEK (P = 0.135). No significant alteration of the retention force over time was measured at the bar (P = 0.289). Retention was estimated to be good with 90% at baseline and with 80% after 6 months, equally by patients and dentist., Conclusions: POM as well as PEEK material fulfills the requirements of retentive clips on round bars., (© 2011 John Wiley & Sons A/S.)
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- 2012
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23. Effect of platform switching on peri-implant bone levels: a randomized clinical trial.
- Author
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Enkling N, Jöhren P, Klimberg V, Bayer S, Mericske-Stern R, and Jepsen S
- Subjects
- Bone Resorption, Dental Implants, Single-Tooth, Female, Humans, Male, Mandible diagnostic imaging, Mandible surgery, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Radiography, Single-Blind Method, Statistics, Nonparametric, Treatment Outcome, Alveolar Bone Loss diagnostic imaging, Alveolar Bone Loss microbiology, Bone Remodeling, Dental Implantation, Endosseous methods, Dental Implants
- Abstract
Objective: The concept of platform switching has been introduced to implant dentistry based on observations of reduced peri-implant bone loss. However, randomized clinical trials are still lacking. This study aimed to test the hypothesis that platform switching has a positive impact on crestal bone-level changes., Material and Methods: Two implants with diameters of 4 mm were inserted epicrestally into one side of the posterior mandibles of 25 subjects. After 3 months of submerged healing, the reentry surgery was performed. On the randomly placed test implant, an abutment 3.3 mm in diameter was mounted, resulting in a horizontal circular step of 0.35 mm (platform switching). The control implant was straight, with an abutment 4 mm in diameter. Single-tooth crowns were cemented provisionally. All patients were monitored at short intervals over the course of 1 year. Standardized radiographs and microbiological samples from the implants' inner spaces were obtained at baseline (implant surgery), and after 3, 4, and 12 months., Results: After 1 year, the mean radiographic vertical bone loss at the test implants was 0.53±0.35 mm and at the control implants, it was 0.58±0.55 mm. The mean intraindividual difference was 0.05±0.56 mm, which is significantly <0.35 mm (P=0.0093, post hoc power 79.9%). The crestal bone-level changes depended on time (P<0.001), but not on platform switching (P=0.4). The implants' internal spaces were contaminated by bacteria, with no significant differences in the total counts between the test and the control at any time point (P=0.98)., Conclusions: The present randomized clinical trial could not confirm the hypothesis of a reduced peri-implant bone loss at implants restored according to the concept of platform switching., (© 2011 John Wiley & Sons A/S.)
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- 2011
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24. Conical crowns with electroplated gold copings: retention force changes caused by wear and combined off-axial load.
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Bayer S, Zuziak W, Kraus D, Keilig L, Stark H, and Enkling N
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- Dental Porcelain chemistry, Dental Stress Analysis instrumentation, Humans, Materials Testing, Stress, Mechanical, Zirconium chemistry, Crowns, Dental Abutments, Dental Prosthesis Design, Dental Prosthesis Retention, Dental Restoration Wear, Electroplating, Gold Alloys chemistry
- Abstract
Objectives: The aim of this study was to examine the wear behavior of conical crowns of gold alloy and zirconium dioxide ceramics facing electroplated gold copings., Methods: The conical crowns were milled in Group A of a cast gold alloy (Degunorm(®), DeguDent(®)) and B zirconium dioxide (Cercon(®), DeguDent(®)). Fifteen specimens were milled per group with a conicity of 2°. The electroplated coping was established by direct electroforming with the Solaris system (DeguDent(®)) and glued into a framework. An apparatus accomplishing 5000 wear cycles performed the wear test. After each of the cycles, extra axial forces (80 N) were loaded 1 million times on an extension of the framework. The retentive forces and the correlating distance during insertion and separation were measured. The wear test was separated in a start phase, an initial wear phase and the long-term wear period. The retention force value and the force-distance integral of the first 0.3 mm of each cycle were calculated., Results: The changes of retention force (ΔF) and integral (ΔF(d)) differed significantly between both groups in the start phase (ΔF: A -1.85 N, B +1.39 N, P=0.0028; ΔF(d): A -0.155 N mm, B +0.2685 N mm, P=0.0378) and the initial wear phase. The long-term wear period showed no differences in force and integral development. As a statistical test for the comparison of the median values of the two groups, the Mann-Whitney test was used. The median force never fell below 4 N or exceeded 12 N., Conclusions: Within the limitations of this study, the conical crowns tested showed clinically acceptable retentive properties. The values of about 4-6 N mentioned as sufficient in the recent literature were always attained. As the most retentive elements for dentures, both groups showed the main changes in retentive forces during the first 2000 cycles. The retention force development of the zirconia group appears to be less excursive over the whole wear test., (© 2010 John Wiley & Sons A/S.)
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- 2011
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25. Tactile sensibility of single-tooth implants and natural teeth.
- Author
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Enkling N, Nicolay C, Utz KH, Jöhren P, Wahl G, and Mericske-Stern R
- Subjects
- Adult, Age Factors, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Bicuspid physiology, Cohort Studies, Copper, Cuspid physiology, Dental Occlusion, Dental Prosthesis Design, Female, Foreign Bodies diagnosis, Humans, Incisor physiology, Male, Middle Aged, Molar physiology, Dental Implants, Single-Tooth, Sensory Thresholds physiology, Tooth physiology, Touch physiology
- Abstract
Aim: The purpose of this randomized split-mouth clinical trial was to determine the active tactile sensibility between single-tooth implants and opposing natural teeth and to compare it with the tactile sensibility of pairs of natural teeth on the contralateral side in the same mouth (intraindividual comparison)., Material and Methods: The hypothesis was that the active tactile sensibilities of the implant side and control side are equivalent. Sixty two subjects (n=36 from Bonn, n=26 from Bern) with single-tooth implants (22 anterior and 40 posterior dental implants) were asked to bite on narrow copper foil strips varying in thickness (5-200 microm) and to decide whether or not they were able to identify a foreign body between their teeth. Active tactile sensibility was defined as the 50% threshold of correct answers estimated by means of the Weibull distribution., Results: The results obtained for the interocclusal perception sensibility differed between subjects far more than they differed between natural teeth and implants in the same individual [implant/natural tooth: 16.7+/-11.3 microm (0.6-53.1 microm); natural tooth/natural tooth: 14.3+/-10.6 microm (0.5-68.2 microm)]. The intraindividual differences only amounted to a mean value of 2.4+/-9.4 microm (-15.1 to 27.5 microm). The result of our statistical calculations showed that the active tactile sensibility of single-tooth implants, both in the anterior and posterior region of the mouth, in combination with a natural opposing tooth is similar to that of pairs of opposing natural teeth (double t-test, equivalence margin: +/-8 microm, P<0.001, power >80%). Hence, the implants could be integrated in the stomatognathic control circuit.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
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