Authors
Akshim Rana, Shubham K Srivastava, Chinmoy Sikdar, Shitij Srivastava, Abhinav Shekhar
Published in
Cureus. Volume 17. Issue 9. Pages e92703. Epub Sep 19, 2025.
Abstract
Endosseous dental implants have demonstrated high clinical success rates, with outcomes consistently replicated across diverse clinical settings. Over time, definitions of implant success have evolved from basic parameters such as pain-free function and absence of infection to more comprehensive criteria, including peri-implant bone stability, marginal bone loss thresholds, intimate bone-to-implant adaptation, and soft-tissue harmony essential for optimal esthetics. While complete-arch, implant-supported rehabilitations within edentulous jaws may maintain a static relationship over time, mixed dentition scenarios involving both natural teeth and implants are influenced by the dynamic nature of craniofacial growth. Although osseointegration and peri-implant tissue stability may persist for decades, the adjacent dentition and jaw structures continue to undergo subtle lifelong positional changes. This disparity can result in functional or esthetic discrepancies despite meeting all conventional success benchmarks. Consequently, the criteria for long-term implant success must consider the impact of lifelong craniofacial growth, which may gradually compromise the harmony between static implant restorations and the continually adapting natural dentition.
PMID:
41116958
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 21 Oct 2025.
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