Chewing side preference and laterality in patients treated with unilateral posterior implant-supported fixed partial prostheses

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Abstract

Background: It is not clear to what extent chewing is improved by unilateral oral rehabilitation with implant-supported fixed partial prostheses (ISFPPs). Objectives: This study aimed to investigate whether patients treated with unilateral ISFPPs in the maxilla use their prostheses during mastication to the same extent as they used their contralateral natural teeth. A further aim was to investigate whether there is a correlation between preferred chewing side and laterality. Methods: Chewing side preference was assessed in 15 participants treated with unilateral ISFPPs in the maxilla. The first, second, third, fifth and tenth chewing cycles were assessed, and the test was repeated 10 times. All participants also answered a questionnaire about their chewing side preference. Results: Most of the participants presented bilateral chewing, but two (13%) chewed only on the ISFPP. There was no statistically significant association between the objectively assessed chewing side and dental status (natural teeth or ISFPPs) during any of the recorded chewing cycles (p >.1). There were statistically significant correlations between both the subjectively reported usually preferred chewing side and the subjective chewing side preference during the test and the objectively assessed chewing side for the first three chewing cycles (p

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Athab Abduljabbar, Z., Svensson, K. G., Hjalmarsson, L., Franke Stenport, V., & Eliasson, A. (2022). Chewing side preference and laterality in patients treated with unilateral posterior implant-supported fixed partial prostheses. Journal of Oral Rehabilitation, 49(11), 1080–1086. https://doi.org/10.1111/joor.13366

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