4.3 Article

Comparison of Osseointegration of Dental Implants Placed in Rabbit Tibia Using Two Dental Laser and Implant Handpiece Systems

Journal

BIOENGINEERING-BASEL
Volume 9, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/bioengineering9110681

Keywords

dental implant; laser; implant stability; osseointegration

Funding

  1. Ministry of Trade, Industry, and Energy (MOTIE)
  2. Korea Institute for Advancement of Technology (KIAT) through the National Innovation Cluster RD program
  3. [P0015338]

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The present study aimed to confirm the usefulness of a multi-laser handpiece system currently under development. The results showed that there was no statistically significant difference between the multi-laser handpiece system and the conventional separate laser-implant handpiece system in terms of implant placement, except for implant initial stability. The multi-laser handpiece system is expected to provide the same results as the conventional system with higher implant initial stability, and potentially improve the clinical environment for clinicians.
The present study aimed to confirm the usefulness of a multi-laser handpiece system currently under development. Implants were placed in the tibia of rabbits using a conventional separate laser-implant handpiece system (control group; SurgicPro+; NSK, Kanuma, Japan and Epic 10; Biolase, Irvine, CA, USA) and a multi-laser handpiece system (experimental group; BLP 10; Saeshin, Daegu, Korea). Implants were placed in left and right tibias of five rabbits using a conventional laser-implant handpiece system and a multi-laser handpiece system (N = 5 per group). Subsequently, micro-computed tomography (micro-CT; bone-to-implant contact evaluation), implant stability quotient (ISQ) measurement, and histological evaluations were performed to confirm the implant placement results. The independent t-test and the paired t-test were used to compare the ISQ values and the results of the two implant-laser handpiece groups (alpha = 0.05), respectively. No statistically significant difference in micro-CT, ISQ, and histological evaluations was observed between implant placement by the two systems (p > 0.05) except implant initial stability. The use of the multi-laser handpiece system is expected to produce the same results as a conventional separate laser-implant handpiece system with the higher implant initial stability. Additionally, it will potentially make the clinical environment more pleasant and will provide convenience for the clinicians.

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