Ab. Carr et al., THE RESPONSE OF BONE IN PRIMATES AROUND UNLOADED DENTAL IMPLANTS SUPPORTING PROSTHESES WITH DIFFERENT LEVELS OF FIT, The Journal of prosthetic dentistry, 76(5), 1996, pp. 500-509
Implant failure as a consequence of prosthetic loading following clini
cal determination of successful stage I healing is poorly understood,
A basic premise of accepted prosthetic protocol is passive connection
of multiunit prostheses to the implant support, To better understand m
echanical factors related to implant failure, this basic passivity pre
mise was experimentally tested prior to study of functional loading re
search, The purpose of this preliminary study was to measure the bone
response around implants placed in the mandible of baboons that suppor
ted prostheses exhibiting two levels of fit and not loaded occlusally,
Screw-retained prostheses that exhibited a mean linear distortion of
38 microns and 345 microns made up the fit and misfit groups respectiv
ely, The results failed to distinguish a difference in bone response b
etween the two levels of prosthetic fit, Although the finding can be a
rgued as a sample size limitation, the data strongly suggest an opposi
te response than is clinically expected and, consequently, does not wa
rrant the use of additional animals in this initial study, Because the
design of this study does not mimic the clinical application of misfi
tting prostheses (where dynamic functional loads are superimposed with
misfit loads), it cannot be inferred that, in clinical application, f
it does not alter the osseointegrated interface, Ongoing investigation
of failure due to nonpassive connections under dynamic loading condit
ions of mastication will help clarify the clinical significance of pas
sivity.