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Introduction, clinical evidence and evolution of the technique
00:00 - 03:22
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1
How to analyze the extraction socket and select patients
03:22 - 06:20
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2
The role of implant stability and implant morphology
06:20 - 07:53
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3
Clinical case: surgical and long-term outcomes of IIPP
07:53 - 09:43
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4
Panel discussion: what are your own personal failure rates? Is presence of the buccal plate really necessary?
09:43 - 14:54
- 5 Community questions
Benefit of Immediate Implants Episode I: Indications and Diagnosis
Video highlights
- The body of clinical evidence for immediate implant placement and provisionalization (IIPP)
- How to analyze the buccal plate and whether soft tissue grafting is indicated
- Implant stability requirements and the role of implant morphology
- Clinical case: a view on the soft tissue response and 11-year outcome
- Debate: is the presence of buccal bone mandatory for immediate implants?
Moderator, Dr. Joseph Kan opens this session highlighting that immediate tooth replacement is one of the most controversial procedures today. Dr. Jose Navarro critically reviews the clinical evidence to demonstrate that IIPP is a reliable treatment option and deepen our understanding of the indications, contraindications, assessment strategies and diagnosis. See how to analyze the buccal plate and the visual technique to assess whether soft tissue grafting is indicated. Through a clinical case, he shows how to implement the technique, respecting biology and anatomy, with a view on the intra- and post-operative soft tissue response as well as the long term outcome. The expert panel Edith Groenendijk, Tristan Staas, Óscar González-Martín, and Gabor Tepper joins to discuss failure rates from their own experience and debate the prerequisite and how best to assess the buccal plate.
Clinical topics
Immediate implant placement Immediate loading / provisionalization Anterior hard & soft tissue management Patient assessmentQuestions
Ask a questionWould you do immediate placement of an implant in upper anterior area where there is bone fenestration buccally and cant get any
Would you do immediate placement of an implant in upper anterior area where there is bone fenestration buccally and cant get any stability of the implant with GBR in the same time or just do GBR and wait for 4 months then place the implant?
Thank you
Would you do immediate placement of an implant in upper anterior area where there is bone fenestration buccally and cant get any stability of the implant with GBR in the same time or just do GBR and wait for 4 months then place the implant?
Thank you
Wait after grafting /gbr. Give a prog to maintain/ gain soft tissue contours
Would you do immediate placement of an implant in upper anterior area where there is bone fenestration buccally and cant get any
Would you do immediate placement of an implant in upper anterior area where there is bone fenestration buccally and cant get any stability of the implant with GBR in the same time or just do GBR and wait for 4 months then place the implant?
Thank you
Would you do immediate placement of an implant in upper anterior area where there is bone fenestration buccally and cant get any stability of the implant with GBR in the same time or just do GBR and wait for 4 months then place the implant?
Thank you
If u can get reasonable implant stability and graft around the implant where there is no evidence of infection my feeling is placing the implant is the preferable option by being able to utilize the osteotomy that the removal of the tooth affords you. Once removal of a tooth occurs u always get tremendous osseous changes of contour and volume in the maxillary anterior.
Do bones have biological subtypes?
I previously heard Professor Joseph Kan analyze that the presence or absence of labial bone plates not only indicates the level of implantation risk but also reflects specific bone biological types, such as the biological classification of thin or thick gums. Is this understanding correct?
I previously heard Professor Joseph Kan analyze that the presence or absence of labial bone plates not only indicates the level of implantation risk but also reflects specific bone biological types, such as the biological classification of thin or thick gums. Is this understanding correct?
Waar is het vervolg van deze uiteenzetting? Waar is de techniek van Tristan Staat en Edith Groenendijk??
Waar is het vervolg van deze uiteenzetting?
Waar is de techniek van Tristan Staat en Edith Groenendijk??
Waar is het vervolg van deze uiteenzetting?
Waar is de techniek van Tristan Staat en Edith Groenendijk??
In reply to Waar is het vervolg van deze uiteenzetting? Waar is de techniek van Tristan Staat en Edith Groenendijk?? by Pieter Peeters
The technique from Tristan Staas and Edith Groenendijk will be presented in Episode 2, during June. Best wishes, the FOR team.