4.7 Article

Is Corticalization in Radiographs Related to a Higher Risk of Bone Loss around Dental Implants in Smoking Patients? A 5-Year Observation of Radiograph Bone-Texture Changes

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE
Volume 12, Issue 16, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jcm12165351

Keywords

bone remodeling; dental implant; smoking; torque; marginal bone loss; intraoral radiographs; radiomics; texture analysis

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This study investigated the impact of smoking on the peri-implant jawbone corticalization phenomenon. The research found that smoking leads to marginal bone loss, which affects the success rate and bone structure of dental implants. The Corticalization Index of bone structure near the implant can be used as an indicator of the implant success rate.
Background: Currently, the topic of dental implants is widely researched. However, still compromising are the factors that can affect implant loss as a consequence of marginal bone loss. One of the factors is smoking, which has a devastating effect on human health and bone structure. Oral health and jaw condition are also negatively affected by smoking. The aim of this study was to evaluate the peri-implant jawbone corticalization phenomenon in tobacco smokers. Methods: A total of 2196 samples from 768 patients with an implant in the neck area were checked, and texture features were analyzed. The corticalization phenomenon was investigated. All analyses were performed in MaZda Software. The influence of corticalization was investigated as a factor on bone structure near the implant neck. The statistical analysis included a feature distribution evaluation, mean (t-test) or median (W-test) comparison, analysis of regression and one-way analysis of variance or Kruskal-Wallis test as no normal distribution or between-group variance was indicated for the significant differences in the investigated groups. Detected differences or relationships were assumed to be statistically significant when p < 0.05. Results: The research revealed that MBL was correlated with smoking after 5 years (0.42 mm +/- 1.32 mm 0 mm +/- 1.25 mm), the Corticalization Index was higher in the smoker group on the day of surgery, and it became higher after 5y of observation (185.98 +/- 90.8 and 243.17 +/- 155.47). The implant-loss frequency was higher in the group of smokers, too, compared to non-smokers (6.74% and 2.87%). The higher the torque value during the implant placement, the higher the Corticalization Phenomenon Index. Conclusions: The research revealed a correlation between smoking and changes in bone structure in radio textures near the implants. The corticalization phenomenon is important, may be detected immediately after implant placement and may be one of the indicators of the implant success rate.

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