DEFINITION OF MECHANICAL STABILITY OF DENTAL IMPLANTS USING RESONANCE-FREQUENCY ANALYSIS

Introduction. Dental implantation allows to achieve the rehabilitation of patients with various forms of adentia in situations where different protocols of prosthetics are not effective or harmful to the surrounding teeth.

Fixation of the implant in the bone is due to the mechanical linkages. The success of osseointegration, and, consequently, implantation as a whole is largely dependent on the mechanical stability of the implant. There are various techniques that determine the stability of the implant indirectly or directly. These include clinical, radiological, torque test, periotest, resonance frequency analysis. Resonance frequency analysis provides an objective assessment of the stability of the implant using Implant Stability Quotient (ISQ) on a scale from one to one hundred.

Objective of this study was to determine the sensitivity of the method of resonance frequency analysis.

Methods and results. This study included 46 patients with partial secondary adentia of lower jaw, which has been indicated to install one implant in the lateral section. Patients were divided into two equal groups (23 patients in each). Determination of ISQ in both groups was performed immediately after fixation of the implant before suturing. In the control group the diagnosis and implant planning was performed using conventional methods of digital orthopantomography. The patients of the main group in addition to research described got cone-beam computer tomography of implantation area before and after surgery.

The stability of the implant according to the postoperative study was higher in patients of the main group. In the study group of 20 cases (87%) ISQ was over or equal to 65, which allows for one-stage implant prosthetics. In the control group such ISQ value was obtained in only 10 cases (43.5%). Mean ISQ in the study group was 68.9±8.4, in the control group — 62.6±13.1. In the study group ISQ was significantly (p<0.05) higher.

Conclusions. Thus, a significant number of methods of determining stability of the implant is described. It should be noted that many of them are subjective and\or indirectly determine the stability of the implant. Therefore, further studies should be devoted to techniques that allow you to do easily reproducible measurement of numerical index of implant stability.