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Implant Procedures 101
Curtis E. Jansen, DDS
Copyright 2000 Journal of the California Dental Association.
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Many practitioners have found implant procedures to be too difficult
or too much trouble to perform. Now that restorative components for
most implant systems allow for cemented restorations, implant procedures
for most clinical situations can be completed in two or three one-hour
appointments. This article will review an easy-to-follow restorative
philosophy using single- and two-to-three-unit implant restorative
procedures that are similar to conventional dental procedures.
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Dr. Jansen will
present "Why You Should Treatment-Plan More Implant and Esthetic Dentistry"
at the CDA Scientific Session in Anaheim. His presentation will be from
9 to 11:30 a.m. on Saturday, April 15, in Room San Simeon A/B of the Anaheim
Hilton and Towers.
Dental-implant surgical and restorative components and dental impression
materials are the top two categories of items that dentists spend their
money on. More than twice as much money is spent every year on implant-related
products (an estimated $175 million) than on impression materials (an
estimated $80 million). However, while most practitioners use impression
materials frequently, most don’t perform implant procedures. In fact,
the average restorative dentist does not do implant procedures, and the
average restorative dentist who does do implant procedures only performs
them on two to three patients a year. Most practitioners have found implant
procedures to be too difficult or too much trouble to perform. Now that
restorative components for most implant systems allow for cemented restorations,
implant procedures for most clinical situations can be completed in two
or three one-hour appointments. This article will review an easy-to-follow
restorative philosophy using single- and two-to-three-unit implant restorative
procedures that are similar to conventional dental procedures.
In the past, most restorative dentists did not feel comfortable with implant
procedures because of the variety designs available. Often, a restorative
dentist would work with a surgeon who used a particular implant system;
and, six months later, the same surgeon would be using a different system.
Some surgeons change implant systems or implants within a system every
18 to 24 months because of perceived advances in design. Restorative doctors
have found implant procedures difficult, the learning curve long, and
office support staff unsure of how much time to allow for implant procedures
or how many appointments to schedule to complete a treatment. The end
result has often been an implant restoration with a lab bill that was
more than expected, and frustration with the amount of time to needed
complete treatment and with complications such as screw loosening. Today,
with changes in restorative philosophy, implants restorations are being
cemented and things are much different. Implants are getting easier to
restore and more restorative practitioners will start working with them.
Restoring dental implants can be very similar to doing conventional dentistry.
Posterior single-tooth restorations can be done in one restorative appointment
after the implant has been placed. This is done by making a orientation
guide (index) at the time the implant is placed (Figure 1). Different
ways of indexing the implant at the time of surgery have been described.2-4
Various components can be used to orient or index the implant at the time
of surgery using impression copings, gold cylinders, or special indexing
components, depending on the implant being used.
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Figure 1. An orientation guide in place being
attached to the adjacent teeth. |
While an implant is being placed during the surgical appointment, the
orientation or index can be made. Composite or resin can be placed on
the orientation component and on several of the adjacent teeth. Once the
material is set, the orientation guide is removed and set aside. The implant
placement procedures are then completed. The implant is then allowed to
integrate for the predetermined amount of time. The patient returns to
the restorative dentist’s office for impressions six to eight weeks after
the surgery. This allows for any changes in the edentulous area to be
recorded. An impression of the implant can be made at the time of implant
surgery, but very little information is gained about the soft tissue in
the surgical field.
A cast is made from the impression of the patient after the implant has
been placed. With this cast and the orientation guide made at the time
of surgery, a model with an implant analog or replica can be fabricated.
This model allows for laboratory procedures to be done while the implant
is integrating (Figure 2). The laboratory fabricates a custom abutment
(prepared tooth form) and a cementable restoration. A screw-through restoration
could also be fabricated. For a posterior restoration -- where esthetics
is not a concern -- the restoration is placed after the allowed time for
integration. This final restoration may be placed (Figures 3 and 4)
in the surgeon’s office, thereby decreasing chairtime in the restorative
dentist’s office.
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Figure 2. A model fabricated using the orientation
guide can represent the position of the implant in relation to the
hard and soft tissues. |
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Figure 3. Stage-two procedures being performed,
exposing the implants.
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Figure 4. The final restoration is placed
at the time of stage-two surgery. |
For anterior areas, or areas of esthetic concern in the posterior, the
orientation guide (index) is made at the time of surgery (Figure 1)
and sent to the lab. Again, six to eight weeks after the surgery, the
patient returns for an impression of the edentulous area. This is done
to record changes that may have occurred in the edentulous ridge due to
surgery. The lab technician needs an accurate reproduction of the soft
tissue architecture. The lab uses this model and the orientation guide
to fabricate a model on which the custom abutment, final metal coping
less veneer material, and provisional are fabricated (Figure 5).
Due to potential tissue changes, a temporary -- rather than definitive
-- restoration is made.
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Figure 5. Custom abutment coping and provisional
made prior to stage-two procedures. |
The custom abutment can be made from various materials. Prepable abutments
are made from titanium, gold, or ceramic cast to cylinders made from plastic
or gold, or from titanium and are computer generated (Procera, Nobel Biocare
USA Inc., Yorba Linda, Calif.).
Once the implant is ready for stage-two procedures, or loading, the
patient returns to the surgeon’s office to have the custom abutment placed
(Figure 6). The provisional is then placed on the custom abutment.
This is an excellent time for the surgeon to determine if any soft tissue
modification will be needed around the restoration or custom abutment.
Again, the restoration is not completed because of the unpredictability
of the soft tissue. The tissue is allowed to mature around the provisional
for four to six weeks. The coping that was made is stored for the following
appointment.
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Figure 6. Custom abutment being placed at
the time of stage-two surgery |
The patient leaves with a fixed restoration on the implant. No longer
does the patient have a removable stayplate. In the past, one of the most
difficult challenges for the restorative dentist was making a provisional
for the single-tooth implant patient after surgery. The surgeon would
normally place a healing abutment and have the patient continue to wear
a stayplate. The stayplate would need to be modified to fit over the healing
abutment, which was placed on the implant. This area of the stayplate,
the acrylic tooth junction, often became weak and broke.
Once the soft tissue has matured around the provisional, the provisional
is removed and the coping (the cementable restoration minus the veneer
material) is placed on the custom abutment (Figure 7). A centric
relation record is made, followed by an impression picking up the coping
(tissue impression). Both of these are sent to the lab. There is a huge
advantage in making this tissue impression with a coping that is made
in the lab on a custom abutment. This allows the practitioner when chairside
to be assured that even if the custom abutment margins are subgingival,
the coping and tissue impression will capture the finish line on the custom
abutment margin. Many claims are made by manufacturers about the ease
of use of prepable abutments chairside. Not only are prepable abutments
difficult to prep at the chair, but if the margin is placed subgingival,
cord packing and retraction procedures around implants are difficult.
There is no periodontal ligament to limit the cord or to pack against.
With the above method, the coping acts as an impression coping, capturing
the abutment finish line regardless of its placement.
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Figure 7. Copings in place after soft tissue
maturity are ready for a tissue impression. |
The lab fabricates a tissue cast from the tissue impression using lab
resin and a paper clip or lab bur. No implant or abutment lab analogs
are needed. The lab applies a veneer material to the coping on a model
that represents the mature tissue around the custom abutment. These procedures
are done in the laboratory ceramic department using conventional lab procedures
and conventional pricing, not in the implant department with implant pricing.
This difference can reduce the lab bill. Most laboratory procedures involving
implant fabrication have surcharges and cost more than conventional procedures.
The final restoration is then ready to be placed on the custom abutment
(Figure 8). Cotton or restorative material is placed over the screw
access opening of the custom abutment. A soft (temporary) or hard (definitive)
cement may be used to retain the final restoration.
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Figure 8. Final restorations in place. |
For multiple-implant restorations, only two or three appointments are
needed. For single implants that did not have an orientation guide made
at the time of surgery and multiple-unit implant restorations, the doctor
will always make an impression during the first appointment after the
allowed implant healing time. Only a plastic stock tray, impression material,
and implant impression copings are needed. Pick-up impression copings
are recommended over transfer impression copings because of their better
accuracy. Corresponding healing abutments and impression copings should
be used (Figures 9 and 10). Regardless of whether a one-stage or
two-stage implant placement protocol is used, healing abutments should
be in place.
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Figure 9. Healing abutments in place. |
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Figure 10. Corresponding impression copings
in place. |
The healing abutments are removed and an impression coping placed. For
multiple implants, one healing abutment at a time is removed, starting
with the most posterior implant. Slight downward pressure and rotation
is used while inserting (with fingers) the impression coping into the
implant. This allows for tactile verification of proper seating of the
coping/implant interface.
Radiographic verification should be made to confirm proper seating. The
tray is tried in and modified accordingly to allow for the screw in the
impression coping to be loosened form the set impression material. If
more than one impression coping is being used and they are adjacent, they
should be connected to increase the accuracy of the impression procedure.
A rigid registration material is recommended (Blue moose, Parkel, Figure
11), composite or cold cure resin can also be used. The impression
is made and the copings picked up in the impression tray. The healing
abutments are replaced, and jaw relations (centric or maximum intercuspal
position records) are made. The patient is instructed to return in 10
to 15 working days for the second appointment.
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Figure 11. Pick-up impression copings with
a rigid registration material connecting the two. |
The impression is sent to the laboratory and laboratory procedures are
begun. Custom abutments can be fabricated in an ideal fashion. For all
intents and purposes, these abutments are "prepped teeth" (Figure 12).
Once the custom abutments are made, no special lab procedures are done.
Procedures go back to conventional dentistry at conventional dentistry
lab fees. If the restoration is being placed where esthetics is not a
concern, the restoration is completed. If esthetics is a concern, or the
clinical situation does not dictate finishing in two appointments, a framework
(Figure 13) and provisional are fabricated along with the custom
abutments. If the clinical situation does not dictate finishing in two
appointments, a provisional will be placed on the custom abutment after
the framework is tried in. This could be the situation if there are multiple
implants that will be splinted together.
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Figure 12. Custom abutments in the laboratory.
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Figure 13. Framework on custom abutments
in the lab. |
At the second appointment, the healing abutments are removed and the
custom abutments are placed. This is done one implant at a time, starting
with the most posterior healing abutment. The healing abutment is removed
and the custom abutment is placed immediately. With many flat-top implant
systems, the tissue can collapse around the implant, making seating of
the restorative components difficult. Once the healing abutment is removed,
the custom abutment should be placed quickly. Radiographic verification
of proper seating of the custom abutments should be made. Once confirmation
of proper seating is made, the framework can be tried in, or, if completing,
the final restoration is placed. The time allotted for this appointment
is close to the amount of time allotted for conventional procedures of
a similar situation. If one allows 30 minutes to try-in and cement a three-unit
fixed partial denture on two abutment teeth, he or she should allow a
similar amount of time when trying in and cementing a fixed partial denture
on two implant custom abutments. For the practitioner doing these procedures
for the first time, 45 minutes should be adequate. Placement of one or
two custom abutments should take no longer than five to 10 minutes.
Often, the tissue will need to mature around a provisional for the practitioner
to evaluate soft tissue contours. In this situation, the provisional is
placed and the coping and or framework stored for a third appointment.
The patient leaves with a provisional restoration, and the tissue is allowed
to mature.
Once the tissue has matured, the patient returns for the third appointment.
The provisional is removed, and the framework is placed. Jaw relations
(centric or maximum intercuspal position records) are done, and the framework
picked up in with a tissue impression as previously described (Figure
14). The margin placement can be 1 mm plus subgingival, and no retraction
cord is needed. The framework is made in the lab to fit the custom abutment
perfectly.
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Figure 14. Left, cross-section view of tissue
impression with picked up framework. Right, resin dies in framework
prior to pouring tissue cast. |
Once an impression is made, the provisional is placed and the patient
told to return in 10 to 15 working days. The framework in the tissue impression
is sent to the lab, and a tissue model is made (Figure 15). No
implant or abutment analogs are needed. Resin dies are made, and the cast
is mounted in the proper fashion. The final veneer material is placed,
and the restoration is completed. The restoration is now ready to be placed
(Figure 16). Time allowed for the insertion procedure on multiple
implants is similar to that allotted for a similar conventional procedure
on multiple-tooth preparations.
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Figure 15. Tissue cast with framework removed.
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Figure 16. Final restoration completed on
the tissue cast in the laboratory. |
For single restorations, a final cement of the practitioner’s choice
can be used. For multiple units, a soft cement such as Optow Trial Cement
(Teledyne Getz, Elk Grove Village, Ill.), Improv (Steri-Oss, Yorba Linda,
Calif.). or Provolink (Ivoclar Vivadent, Amherst, N.Y.) is recommended.
Zinc-oxide eugenol-based cements can be used but can be more difficult
to remove. Multiple-unit restorations should be removed annually to check
the individual implants for mobility.5
Cemented restoration have many advantages and few disadvantages.6-8
One contraindication for cemented single- or multiple-implant restorations
is a restoration with very little interarch distance. If a similar situation
was found in a conventional dental situation, the practitioner would use
the most retentive cement available. With implant dentistry in areas where
minimum retention can be achieved on the custom abutments, the option
of screw retention is used. Screw-retained restorations offer the ultimate
in retention. Multiple-unit implant restorations that are cemented with
soft cements can be difficult to remove. A new instrument from Kavo, the
Coronoflex (Kavo America, Lake Zurich, Ill.), makes removing these restorations
easier.
The above procedures describe implant dentistry performed similarly to
conventional dentistry. Only two or three goal-oriented appointments of
no longer than an hour are needed. Most manufacturers have components
that allow for these types of restorations. For practitioners who have
had frustrations in the past with restorative implant procedures, times
have changed. Today, implant restorative procedures can be easy for the
patient, staff, and dentist.
Author
Curtis E. Jansen, DDS, maintains a full-time private practice limited
to prosthodontics in Monterey and Salinas, Calif.
References
1. Personal communication. Presidents and or CEOs of Ivoclar North America,
Noble Biocare Steri-Oss, Implant Innovations Inc., and Astra Tech.
2. Hochwald DA, Surgical template impression during stage I surgery for
fabrication of
a provisional restoration to be placed at stage II surgery. J Prosthet
Dent, 66(6): 796-8, 1991.
3. Reiser G, Dornbush JR, and Cohen R, Initializing restorative procedures
at first stage surgery with a positional hex: A case report. J Perio
Rest Dent, 12(4):279-93, 1992.
4. Prestipino V and Ingber A, Implant fixture position registration at
the time of fixture
placement surgery. Pract Perio Aesthetic Dent 4(9):23-7, 1992.
5. Jemt T, Linden B, Lekholm U, Failure and complications in 127 consecutively
placed
fixed partial prostheses supported on Branemark implants: from prosthetic
treatment
to first annual check-up. Int J Oral Maxillofac Implants 7:40-4,
1992.
6. Pauletto N, Lahiffe B, Walton J, Complications associated with excess
cement around crowns on osseointegrated implants: a clinical report. Int
J Oral Maxillofac Implants 14:865-8, 1999.
7. Keith S, Miller B, et al, Marginal discrepancy of screw-retained and
cemented metal-ceramic crowns on implant abutments. Int J Oral Maxillofac
Implants 14:369-78, 1999.
8. Hebel KS, Gajjar RC, Cement-retained versus screw-retained implant
restorations:
Achieving optimal occlusion and esthetics in implant dentistry. J Prosthet
Dent
77:28-35, 1997.
To request a printed copy of this article, please contact/Curtis E. Jansen,
DDS, 34 Dormody Court, Monterey, CA 93940.
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