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The overall aim of the study is to investigate whether routine administration of antibiotic prophylaxis 1 hour prior to implant surgery may prevent postoperative infection and implant loss in healthy or substantially healthy patients (ASA Class 1 and Class 2).
Full description
The prevalence of bacteria resistant to antibiotics is increasing and there is a correlation between high consumption of antibiotics and high incidence of antibiotic resistance. It is therefore important to reduce the prescription of antibiotics. Antibiotics in dental care are used to treat oral infections as well as to prevent infections associated with surgical procedures. An example of the latter is antibiotic prophylaxis associated with dental implant surgery in order to reduce the risk of postoperative infection that can lead to loss of implant.The study will be conducted as a multicenter placebo-controlled randomized clinical trial. Eligible patients will be asked for participation and those who leave oral and written information will be included in the study. Patients included will be allocated to either active treatment (antibiotic prophylaxis) or placebo. Both clinicians and patients will be blinded to group affiliation. A total of 10 clinicians in 8 centers in the south of Sweden have agreed to participate and each clinicians will be allowed to use the implants and routines that they usually work with.
Specific aims of the study are to test the following hypotheses:
If it appears that antibiotic prophylaxis does not lead to any risk reduction, this result may provide a basis for guidelines rejecting antibiotic prophylaxis in dental implant surgery.
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474 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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