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This clinical trial with a quasi-experimental design investigates the accuracy of dental implant placement using three different surgical approaches: free-handed countersink guided, fully-guided, and traditional freehand techniques in partially edentulous patients. Dental implant therapy not only requires successful osseointegration but also a precise three-dimensional placement to ensure functional and esthetic outcomes. Accurate implant positioning is vital to prevent complications and ensure long-term stability. The evolution of digital technology has led to the development of computer-assisted implant surgery, enhancing surgical precision and minimizing the chances of deviation from planned positions.
In this study, implants were placed in the same patients on both sides of the jaw using two techniques for comparison - one side received a free-handed countersink guided implant, while the other used a fully-guided surgical guide. Patients included in this research were partially dentate adults with adequate oral health, bone volume, and no systemic conditions or habits that could interfere with healing. Pre-operative and post-operative cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT) scans were used to evaluate the positional accuracy of the implants.
The three-dimensional evaluation method utilized Blue Sky Plan 4 and 3D Slicer software to superimpose and analyze implant placements. Parameters such as angular deviation, crestal global deviation, apical global deviation, vertical linear deviation, lateral linear deviation, apical vertical deviation, apical lateral deviation, and distances from anatomical structures like the inferior alveolar nerve and the maxillary sinus were measured to assess placement accuracy. Measurements were taken using automatic image registration and STL superimposition of planned versus actual implant locations.
Data collected was analyzed using SPSS software. Both descriptive and inferential statistical analyses were conducted. The results aimed to determine the accuracy differences between countersink-guided and fully-guided implant techniques. The findings of this study contribute to evidence-based clinical decisions in implant dentistry by exploring if countersink-guided approaches offer comparable accuracy to fully-guided methods, thus supporting safer and more effective dental implant procedures in clinical practice.
Full description
This clinical trial with a quasi-experimental study design explores the comparative accuracy of dental implant placement using three different surgical protocols in partially edentulous patients: free-handed countersink guided, fully-guided, and traditional freehand methods. The precision of implant positioning plays a pivotal role in the long-term success and aesthetics of dental implant therapy. Although osseointegration is fundamental, optimal functional and esthetic outcomes are contingent upon the precise three-dimensional positioning of the implant within the jawbone. The rationale behind this study stems from the clinical observation that improper implant placement can result in technical and biological complications, leading to treatment failure or compromised prosthetic outcomes.
The advent of digital imaging and surgical planning has revolutionized implant dentistry. Traditional radiographic stents and manual implant placement methods have been increasingly replaced by static computer-assisted implant surgery (s-CAIS), allowing for improved preoperative visualization and enhanced implant positioning accuracy. In the digital workflow, combining intraoral scans with cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT) enables clinicians to plan implant positions based on bone quality, soft tissue contours, and the spatial relationship with adjacent teeth or anatomical landmarks.
Despite these advancements, there remains a lack of clinical evidence on the performance of countersink guided protocols specifically. Countersink guided placement involves using drills designed to widen the crestal cortical bone, especially in cases of dense bone, facilitating a passive fit of the implant at the neck. This approach is typically categorized under the freehand technique but is believed to offer enhanced stability during insertion. Fully-guided surgery, in contrast, utilizes a prefabricated guide that controls each step of the drilling and implant placement process, theoretically minimizing deviation.
The study involved the recruitment of partially dentate adults who fulfilled strict inclusion criteria such as having at least six remaining teeth, good oral hygiene, sufficient bone volume for implant placement without the need for grafting, and the ability to maintain mouth opening of at least 40 mm. Patients with parafunctional habits, heavy smoking, psychiatric or systemic conditions that contraindicate implant surgery, a history of radiotherapy in the head and neck region, or younger than 18 years of age were excluded.
Each patient received two implants-one placed with the countersink guided freehand method, and the other placed using a fully-guided surgical protocol. Both procedures were performed by the same surgeon using a parallel surgical kit (Dentsply®, MIS, M4, Germany), ensuring consistency in technique and instrumentation. The implants were placed on the same day and with identical preoperative planning to eliminate inter-operator and time-related variability.
To evaluate the accuracy of implant placement, preoperative CBCT scans were taken to plan the implant location, followed by postoperative CBCT scans after implant insertion. Digital planning and analysis were conducted using Blue Sky Plan 4 software and the 3D Slicer platform. Postoperative CBCT data was processed and segmented to extract the STL file of the actual implant placement. These files were then superimposed onto the original preoperative plan using point-based automatic registration. More than twenty anatomical and reference points were marked to ensure a precise overlay, enabling a direct comparison of the actual and planned implant positions in three-dimensional space.
The primary outcome of interest was angular deviation-the angle formed between the axis of the planned implant and the axis of the inserted implant. Secondary outcomes included several linear deviations: crestal global deviation (distance between the coronal ends of the planned and placed implants), apical global deviation (distance between apical endpoints), vertical linear deviation (vertical displacement measured at the implant hexagon), lateral linear deviation (horizontal displacement along the implant axis), apical vertical deviation, and apical lateral deviation. Additionally, two anatomical safety measures were assessed: the distance from the implant to the inferior alveolar nerve in the mandible and to the maxillary sinus in the upper jaw.
These parameters were visualized and measured within the Blue Sky Plan 4 software. Measurement techniques adhered to rigorous digital protocols ensuring minimal human error and high reproducibility. The implant planned position was displayed in red, and the actual implant placement was marked in yellow, allowing for straightforward differentiation and measurement. Each deviation type was clearly outlined and labeled, enabling comprehensive analysis.
Once the measurements were collected, data entry and statistical analysis were conducted using SPSS version 22. Descriptive statistics summarized demographic and clinical characteristics of the sample. Central tendency measures provided insights into the distribution of deviation parameters. Inferential statistics included Independent t-tests for comparing mean deviation values between the countersink guided and fully-guided groups. When normality assumptions were not met, non-parametric equivalents were employed. Chi-square and Fisher's exact tests were applied for categorical variable comparisons. A 95% confidence interval was considered, with a p-value of less than 0.05 interpreted as statistically significant.
The primary objective was to determine whether the countersink guided technique demonstrated comparable accuracy to the fully-guided method. Accurate implant placement is critical not only for esthetic alignment and prosthetic function but also to prevent inadvertent injury to vital anatomical structures. Understanding whether a simpler countersink-guided approach can yield similar outcomes to more resource-intensive fully-guided surgery can have significant implications for clinical decision-making, cost-effectiveness, and treatment accessibility.
The findings of this study are expected to bridge the current knowledge gap by offering clinically derived data that supports or refutes the relative precision of countersink guided surgery. If the countersink technique proves nearly as accurate as fully-guided surgery, it may emerge as a reliable alternative in clinical scenarios where digital planning or guide fabrication is not feasible or practical. Conversely, significant deviations could reinforce the superiority of fully-guided approaches, especially in anatomically sensitive or esthetically demanding cases.
Ultimately, the goal of this research is to contribute to the evolving field of implantology by evaluating emerging surgical techniques through a robust, clinically relevant framework. This study offers valuable insights into surgical accuracy in implant dentistry and highlights the importance of precise preoperative planning, technique selection, and the integration of digital technologies to enhance patient outcomes and safety.
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Inclusion criteria
Partially dentate adults with at least 6 remaining teeth
Exclusion criteria
Heavy smoking
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Interventional model
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15 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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