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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Peri-implant diseases: Consensus Report of the Sixth European Workshop on Periodontology

TLDR
In this paper, the authors discussed the most common peri-implant lesions caused by bacteria and concluded that the treatment of periimplant disease must include anti-infective measures.
Abstract
Issues related to peri-implant disease were discussed. It was observed that the most common lesions that occur, i.e. peri-implant mucositis and peri-implantitis are caused by bacteria. While the lesion of peri-implant mucositis resides in the soft tissues, peri-implantitis also affects the supporting bone. Peri-implant mucositis occurs in about 80% of subjects (50% of sites) restored with implants, and peri-implantitis in between 28% and 56% of subjects (12-40% of sites). A number of risk indicators were identified including (i) poor oral hygiene, (ii) a history of periodontitis, (iii) diabetes and (iv) smoking. It was concluded that the treatment of peri-implant disease must include anti-infective measures. With respect to peri-implant mucositis, it appeared that non-surgical mechanical therapy caused the reduction in inflammation (bleeding on probing) but also that the adjunctive use of antimicrobial mouthrinses had a positive effect. It was agreed that the outcome of non-surgical treatment of peri-implantitis was unpredictable. The primary objective of surgical treatment in peri-implantitis is to get access to the implant surface for debridement and decontamination in order to achieve resolution of the inflammatory lesion. There was limited evidence that such treatment with the adjunctive use of systemic antibiotics could resolve a number of peri-implantitis lesions. There was no evidence that so-called regenerative procedures had additional beneficial effects on treatment outcome.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Peri‐implant health and disease. A systematic review of current epidemiology

TL;DR: Future studies on the epidemiology of peri-implant diseases should consider applying consistent case definitions and assessing random patient samples of adequate size and function time, according to the meta-regression analysis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Periimplant diseases: where are we now? – Consensus of the Seventh European Workshop on Periodontology

TL;DR: Clinical and radiographic data should routinely be obtained after prosthesis installation on implants in order to establish a baseline for the diagnosis of peri-implantitis during maintenance of implant patients.
Journal ArticleDOI

The epidemiology of peri-implantitis.

TL;DR: Smoking and a history of periodontitis have been associated with a higher prevalence of peri-implantitis and factors that should be considered are the disease definition, the differential diagnosis, the chosen thresholds for probing depths and bone loss, differences in treatment methods and aftercare of patients, and dissimilarities in the composition of study populations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Comparative biology of chronic and aggressive periodontitis vs. peri-implantitis

TL;DR: It is evident that periodontitis and peri-implantitis are not fundamentally different from the perspectives of etiology, pathogenesis, risk assessment, diagnosis and therapy, Nevertheless, some difference in the host response to these two infections may explain the occasional rapid progression of pero-IMplantitis lesions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Clinical research on peri-implant diseases: consensus report of Working Group 4

TL;DR: To improve the quality of research in peri-implant diseases, the following were recommended: the use of unequivocal case definitions; the expression of outcomes at the subject rather than the implant level; the implementation of study validation tools; the reporting of potential sources of bias; and theUse of appropriate statistical methods.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Definition and prevalence of peri-implant diseases.

TL;DR: It is revealed that only a few studies provided data on the prevalence of peri-implant diseases, and cross-sectional studies on implant-treated subjects are rare and data from only two study samples were available.
Journal ArticleDOI

Peri-implant diseases: diagnosis and risk indicators

TL;DR: There is strong evidence that poor oral hygiene, a history of periodontitis and cigarette smoking, are risk indicators for peri-implant disease.
Journal ArticleDOI

Non-surgical treatment of peri-implant mucositis and peri-implantitis : a literature review

TL;DR: It was observed that mechanical non-surgical therapy could be effective in the treatment of peri-implant mucositis lesions and the adjunctive use of antimicrobial mouth rinses enhanced the outcome of mechanical therapy of such mucositIS lesions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Surgical treatment of peri-implantitis.

TL;DR: The use of regenerative procedures such as bone graft techniques with or without the use of barrier membranes has been reported with various degrees of success, but it must be stressed that such techniques do not address disease resolution but rather merely attempt to fill the osseous defect.
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