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Ablative and Expansive Protocols for Bone Osteotomy in Rabbits.

Kazuhisa Kuwano1, Luigi Canullo2,3, Daniele Botticelli1,4

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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Dental implant site preparation using drilling alone or the funnel technique showed no significant differences in bone healing or resorption. Both methods effectively stabilized implants without causing marginal bone loss, regardless of bone density.

Keywords:
bone responsedrilling techniqueimplant preparation

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Area of Science:

  • Oral surgery
  • Biomaterials science
  • Bone biology

Background:

  • Cortical and marrow bone exhibit distinct histomorphometric properties.
  • Traditional implant insertion relies on cortical stabilization, potentially causing bone resorption.
  • Variations in bone density necessitate evaluating implant site preparation techniques.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To compare bone healing following two implant site preparation protocols: drilling alone versus drilling with osteotomes (funnel technique).
  • To assess bone healing across different bone densities and anatomical regions (cervical, marrow, apical).

Main Methods:

  • Surgical placement of dental implants in rabbit femurs and tibias using two preparation methods.
  • Evaluation of bone healing at 3 and 6 weeks post-implantation in 12 rabbits.
  • Histomorphometric analysis of bone-to-implant contact (BIC%) and marginal bone resorption.

Main Results:

  • No marginal bone resorption was observed in the cervical region for either preparation technique.
  • Bone-to-implant contact percentages (BIC%) were similar between the funnel and drill sites at 3 and 6 weeks.
  • Higher BIC% was noted in femora compared to tibiae, though differences were not statistically significant.

Conclusions:

  • Both implant site preparation techniques (drilling alone and funnel technique) demonstrated comparable bone healing and lack of marginal bone loss.
  • Osteotome use in the funnel technique did not negatively impact healing in the marrow region.
  • The study suggests that implant site preparation method does not significantly affect early bone healing outcomes across varying bone densities.