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      Attachment systems for mandibular implant overdentures: a systematic review

      research-article
      , DDS 1 , , DDS, MSc, PhD 1 , , DDS, MPH, PhD, MSc 1 , , , DDS, MSc, PhD, FRCD(C) 2
      The Journal of Advanced Prosthodontics
      The Korean Academy of Prosthodontics
      Denture, Overlay, Mandibular prosthesis, Dental implants, Outcome assessment, Patient satisfaction

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          Abstract

          PURPOSE

          The aim of this systematic review was to address treatment outcome according to attachment systems for mandibular implant overdentures in terms of implant survival rate, prosthetic maintenance and complications, and patient satisfaction.

          MATERIALS AND METHODS

          A systematic literature search was conducted using PubMed and hand searching of relevant journals considering inclusion and exclusion criteria. Clinical trial studies on mandibular implant overdentures until August, 2010 were selected if more than one type of overdenture attachment was reported. Twenty four studies from 1098 studies were finally included and the data on implant survival rate, prosthetic maintenance and complications, patient satisfaction were analyzed relative to attachment systems.

          RESULTS

          Four studies presented implant survival rates (95.8 - 97.5% for bar, 96.2 - 100% for ball, 91.7% for magnet) according to attachment system. Ten other studies presented an implant survival rate ranging from 93.3% to 100% without respect to the attachment groups. Common prosthetic maintenance and complications were replacement of an assay for magnet attachments, and activation of a matrix or clip for ball or bar attachments. Prosthetic maintenance and complications most commonly occurred in the magnet groups. Conflicting findings were found on the rate of prosthetic maintenance and complications comparing ball and bar attachments. Most studies showed no significant differences in patient satisfaction depending upon attachment systems.

          CONCLUSION

          The implant survival rate of mandibular overdentures seemed to be high regardless attachment systems. The prosthetic maintenance and complications may be influenced by attachment systems. However patient satisfaction may be independent of the attachment system.

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          Most cited references42

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          The McGill consensus statement on overdentures. Mandibular two-implant overdentures as first choice standard of care for edentulous patients. Montreal, Quebec, May 24-25, 2002.

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            Attachment systems for implant retained overdentures: a literature review.

            This article presents a comparison between different attachment systems used to retain and support maxillary and mandibular overdentures in completely edentulous patients. A literature review based on a MEDLINE search limited to English-language articles published from 1988 to the present was performed, and a large number of attachments available in the dental market were reviewed with regard to several factors, including: (1) implant survival rate, (2) marginal bone loss, (3) soft tissue complications, (4) retention, (5) stress distribution, (6) space requirements, (7) maintenance complications, and (8) patient satisfaction. These factors are considered essential for the successful outcome and good long-term prognosis of the prostheses. Selection criteria previously published in the literature are discussed as well. Product names and manufacturers are mentioned only if related to attachment systems, as they are cited in the original articles.
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              A comparison of three different attachment systems for mandibular two-implant overdentures: one-year report.

              There is a lack of clinical studies on the self-aligning attachment system (Locator(R); Zest Anchors, Inc. homepage, Escondido, CA, USA) for two-implant-retained overdentures in the edentulous mandible. Therefore, a comparison of the Locator with two traditional designs (a rotational gold matrix and a rubber O-ring type) in clinical 1-year use was conducted. From 2003 to 2007, 60 patients received two Osseotite(R) TG Standard implants (BIOMET 3i Implant Innovations, Palm Beach Gardens, FL, USA) in the intraforaminal area of the edentulous mandible. The implants were left unloaded for 3.5 months, randomized to three different attachment systems, and loaded through a mandibular overdenture. Twenty-three patients received a self-aligning attachment system (Locator) and 33 patients a ball attachment (Dal-Ro(R)[BIOMET 3i Implant Innovations]n = 25; TG-O-Ring(R)[Cendres & Metaux SA, Biel-Bienne, Switzerland]n = 8). After 12 months of delivery of the overdentures, the oral situation was evaluated: prosthodontic maintenance and biologic complications, subjective patients' experience, and oral health-related life quality (Oral Health Impact Profile [OHIP-G 49]). After 1-year of clinical service, 8 of 120 implants were lost (9.6%). The Locator system brought up 34 prosthetic complications, especially the need for change of the male parts or activation because of loss of retention. The TG-O-Ring patients showed 14 complications, most of them the change of the O-Rings. The patients with the Dal-Ro abutment had seven minor complications in 12 months of clinical use. Biologic complications and patients' oral health-related life quality showed no significant difference among the three experimental groups. Prosthodontic maintenance was restricted to loss of retention for all systems. Within the observation period of this study, the self-aligning attachment system showed a higher rate of maintenance than the ball attachments. The patients' oral health-related life qualities as well as the biologic parameters do not differ when using the three abutment systems.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                J Adv Prosthodont
                J Adv Prosthodont
                JAP
                The Journal of Advanced Prosthodontics
                The Korean Academy of Prosthodontics
                2005-7806
                2005-7814
                November 2012
                29 November 2012
                : 4
                : 4
                : 197-203
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Prosthodontics, Institute for Clinical Dental Research, KUMC, Korea University, Seoul, Korea.
                [2 ]Department of Prosthetics and Dental Geriatrics, Faculty of Dentistry, The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada.
                Author notes
                Corresponding author: Sang-Wan Shin. Department of Prosthodontics, Graduate School of Clinical Dentistry, KUMC, Korea University, 97, Gurodonggil, Guro-Gu, Seoul, 152-703, Korea. Tel. 82 2 2626 1922: swshin@ 123456korea.ac.kr

                These authors are equally contributed to this work.

                Article
                10.4047/jap.2012.4.4.197
                3517957
                23236571
                06921f24-2fc5-41a0-b890-4b5a43d6dff4
                © 2012 The Korean Academy of Prosthodontics

                This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 04 October 2010
                : 05 November 2012
                : 12 November 2012
                Categories
                Original Article

                Dentistry
                overlay,outcome assessment,patient satisfaction,denture,dental implants,mandibular prosthesis

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