The effect of smoking on implant survival at second-stage surgery: Dicrg interim reprot no. 5

104Citations
Citations of this article
16Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

Smoking has been reported to have a deleterious effect on the oral cavity. Research has associated smoking with oral cancer, periodontal disease, leukoplakia, stomatitis nicotina, and impaired gingival bleeding. In 1991 the Dental Implant Clinical Research Group initiated a prospective, randomized clinical study in cooperation with the Department of Veterans Affairs to investigate the influence of implant design, application, and site of placement on long-term clinical performance and crestal bone height. Over 70 dental and medical history variables and exclusion factors were analyzed to determine relationships, if any, with implant failure at the time of second-stage surgery. The variables were analyzed separately for individual implants, cases (prostheses), and patients. The cases ranged from one to five implants each, and more than one case from a single patient could be included in the investigation. At this interim analysis, 2,066 implants have been placed representing 433 cases in 310 patients. With regard to implant failure rates, possible exclusion variables (9) and medical history variables (39) were not found to be statistically significant. For the dental history variables (23), only the question related to smoking was statistically significant on an implant, case, and patient basis (P< 0.007). Results of this interim analysis suggest that smoking is detrimental to implant success. © 1994 by Williams and Wilkins.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Gorman, L. M., Lambert, P. M., Morris, H. F., Ochi, S., Winkler, S., Blankenship, J. R., … O’Toole, T. (1994). The effect of smoking on implant survival at second-stage surgery: Dicrg interim reprot no. 5. Implant Dentistry, 3(3), 165–168. https://doi.org/10.1097/00008505-199409000-00004

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free