Treatment concepts posterior region timing concepts -

Treatment concepts posterior region timing concepts

Media Type:
Clinical Video
Duration:
1h 25mins
Credits:
G. Finelle & S. Vandeweghe

1. Clinical Challenge Posterior molar extractions lead to unpredictable buccal ridge resorption (30–50 % within 6 months).

Conventional (delayed) protocol → two surgeries, 6–9 months, often requires GBR/CTG.

Socket preservation reduces bone loss but adds cost, morbidity, and can compromise soft tissue.

2. Immediate Implant Placement & Loading (Dr. Gary Finelle) Socket‑Seal Abutment (SSA): custom, anatomically shaped healing abutment placed at extraction→implant; rigid closure preserves clot & soft‑tissue scaffold without flaps or membranes.

Workflow: atraumatic extraction → intraseptal osteotomy & implant placement → gap grafting as needed → seat SSA + “spider‑web” composite seal → interim scan at 3 months → final crown.

Outcomes: in > 300 cases (9 yr follow‑up) horizontal bone loss < 2 % vs. 10–25 % with socket grafting; one surgery, 3–4 mo to final crown; improved comfort & function.

Cautions: requires primary stability, adequate septal bone; operator experience crucial; more RCTs needed for immediate placement + immediate loading.

3. Evidence on Immediate Loading (Prof. Stefan Vandeweghe) Literature Gaps: abundant anterior data; posterior region under‑studied—especially true immediate placement + immediate loading.

Survival Rates: immediate‑loaded posterior implants (single/partial) ≈ 95 % at 2–5 yrs, on par with conventional protocols.

Short Implants: 6.5–8 mm under immediate loading show no higher failure risk; splinting reduces micromotion.

Implant Design: tapered implants yield higher insertion torque but may exhibit greater lateral micromotion; choose diameter/length to balance: primary stability vs. bone preservation.

Biology & Mechanics: primary stability ≥ 30 N·cm (20 N·cm if splinted); moderately rough, screw‑thread surfaces accelerate osseointegration; ≤ 150 µm micromotion tolerated.

4. Decision‑Making in Practice Immediate Placement: robust septal bone, minimal GBR, assured primary stability, experienced operator.

Immediate Loading: when rapid function is desired and you can control provisional occlusion and micromotion; overall treatment 3–4 months vs. 6–9 months.

Protocol Combinations:

Immediate placement + delayed loading: safest, well documented for posterior.

Delayed placement + immediate loading: predictable in healed ridges.

Immediate placement + immediate loading: promising (especially with SSA), but needs more high‑level evidence before broad adoption.

5. Take‑Home Messages Preserve socket volume & contour at implant placement—SSA, provisional‑guided closure, or socket graft + membrane.

Aim for high primary stability, but recognize implant geometry, surface, and splinted provisionals also govern micromotion and osseointegration.

Tailor timing & loading to each posterior case—balancing patient desire for speed with surgical risk and current evidence.

Further RCTs needed on immediate placement + immediate loading in molar regions before widespread adoption.