
by Carl E. Misch, DDS, MDS, PhD (hc)
Introduction
Implant dentistry has become the most predictable method
to replace missing teeth. However, treatment planning for
implant dentistry is most often driven by the existing bone volume
in the edentulous sites. This method is often problematic.
In partially edentulous patients, more than 6mm of bone height
is found in 40 percent of posterior maxillae and 50 percent of
posterior mandibles. This percentage is further reduced to less
than 20 percent of completely edentulous patients in either
arch. The doctor and the patient often have an incentive to do
treatment which is faster, easier and less expensive. The typical
fees associated with treatment in implant dentistry are related to
the number of implants and teeth replaced. Hence, a three-unit
fixed partial denture supported by two implants is one-half
the fee of a six-unit fixed partial denture supported by four
implants. As a result, instead of bone grafts and posterior
implants, distal cantilevers are often extended from anterior
implants, since more vertical bone is found anterior to the maxillary
sinus in the maxilla or the inferior alveolar nerve and mental
foramen in the mandible.
The primary cause of complications in implant dentistry is
related to biomechanical factors, with too much stress applied to
the implant support system. When implants are inserted into
abundant bone volume and allowed to integrate for four or
more months before loading, the surgical success rate is more
than 98 percent. This success rate is not related to implant number,
size or design. However, when the implant is occlusal loaded
with the prosthesis, the failure rate might be greater than three
to six times the surgical failure. For example, a meta-analysis reveals 15 percent failure rates (with several reports of more than
30 percent failure) when the implant prosthesis is occlusal
loaded with implants shorter than 10mm, or when they are
placed in softer bone. This failure most often occurs during the
first 18 months of loading and is called early loading failure.
Mechanical complications of the implant components or
prosthesis outnumber surgical failures and many reports are
more frequent than early loading failures. These complications
include abutment screw loosening, uncemented prostheses and
porcelain fracture. These complications are more often in bruxism
patients, males, when opposing implant prostheses and with
group function occlusion. All of the factors increase the amount
of stress on the implant system (occlusal porcelain, cement,
implant abutment screw and implant-bone interface).
Biomechanical stress might also cause marginal crestal bone
loss. Since the implant does not have a periodontal membrane
as a tooth, the stress to the implant-bone interface is mostly to
the crestal marginal bone. When the stress is beyond the bone
physiologic limit, resorption might occur. The bone loss might
increase the risk of anaerobic bacteria and peri-implantitis, or
the surrounding soft tissues might shrink and result in poor cervical
aesthetics. Hence, biomechanical factors can lead to early
loading failure, mechanical complications and/or marginal bone
loss around an implant.
Stress Magnifiers
Cantilevers on the prosthesis are one of the most significant
stress magnifiers to the implant system. When used in the posterior
regions, the greater bite force (up to five times greater than the
anterior region), is further magnified and might increase the force
on the implant system by three times. In order to eliminate posterior
cantilevers, a bone augmentation is often indicated. Most
bone augmentation procedures are not as predictable as implant
integration in existing bone volumes. Bone augmentation often
requires an additional surgery prior to implant placement.
Additional training is required to learn bone augmentation
procedures and the learning curve is longer and more difficult to
become accomplished in these techniques. Complications
related to bone augmentation are more common than implant
surgery in existing bone volumes and might be more extensive
and even debilitating to the patient.
The discomfort following bone augmentation is usually
more than occurs after implant surgery. An extended healing
time of four to nine months might be necessary for the bone
graft to mature, compared to implant healing in native bone.
The costs associated with bone augmentation are often greater
than the fees related to implant insertion. In addition, there are
usually more implants and more teeth replaced after bone augmentation
compared to situations when implants are inserted
into existing volumes of the bone and teeth are cantilevered to
the posterior regions. More implants and more teeth replacements
further increase the cost to the patient. As a consequence
of these considerations, the doctor and the patient are both
motivated to use existing bone volumes for implants and restore
fewer posterior teeth in the prosthesis, often with a cantilever.

Risk Factors
An example of the patient and doctor having incentive to
perform procedures with higher risks is when a patient has four
teeth missing in a posterior maxillary quadrant (two premolars
and two molars), with a pneumatized maxillary sinus cavity.
There are typically two treatment options. The first is to place
two implants anterior to the sinus, which supports a three-unit
prosthesis (with a first molar cantilever). A second option is to
perform a sinus bone graft, the insertion of three implants (in
the first premolar, first molar and second molar position) and to
fabricate a four-unit restoration.
Fees and Risk Factors
The first treatment option is one-half the fee of the second
option, since it doesn't require a sinus graft, has fewer implants
and less teeth replaced. The first option is also faster and easier
since a bone regeneration is not required. The patient undergoes
one surgery and therefore experiences less discomfort. However,
the second treatment option has three to four times better
chance for long-term success, since it doesn't cantilever a pontic
in the molar region. Since cantilevers increase the biomechanical
force to the anterior implants, there is an increased risk of an
unretained prosthesis on the first premolar (because of a tensile
force to the retainer and cement is 20 times weaker to tension
compared to compression). This results with one implant (the
second premolar) supporting three teeth and the risk of overload
and failure.
The first treatment option more often has more bone loss
from occlusal overload related to the increased biomechanical
stress as a result of the cantilever (Fig. 1). In addition, the mandibular second molar might erupt past the plane of
occlusion with the first option (since it only has one molar)
and each protrusive mandibular movement would result in a
lateral premature contact on the maxillary prosthesis. This
bone direction increases the sheer force, and might even trigger
parafunction. As a result, all complications related to
stress are increased.
Biomechanical-related complications often occur within the
first few years of function. As a result, the patient expects the
dentist to repeat the treatment for no charge. When the first
option fails, the second treatment option might be selected,
often from a different dentist, which is associated with a greater
cost. As a result, the patient is more likely to bring litigation
against the first treatment team in order to pay for the additional
costs of the second treatment option.
As a consequence of an increased risk of complications in the
first treatment option, the fees for this option should be more
than the second treatment option. In other words, the fee for
services rendered should not only be based upon the sum of the
number of implants and teeth in the prosthesis, it should also
include the amount of risk associated with the treatment.
A more basic example of charging for risk factors is the treatment
for a crown on a maxillary central incisor compared to a mandibular molar. The time and technique for an anterior
preparation, impression and transitional prosthesis is greater
than to restore a mandibular posterior tooth. The risk that an
anterior maxillary crown has to be redone because of gingival
recession, shade selection, etc. is greater than the mandibular
crown. Yet, most dentists charge the same fee for both procedures.
The maxillary anterior crown has more risk, therefore the
fee should be greater.
Full-arch Restorations
When a full-arch fixed implant restoration is the treatment
for a maxillary arch, the number of implants is often the same as
the mandible. For example, "all in four" is a common treatment
option presented to the profession in either arch, along with
similar fees for either arch to the patient. Yet, the maxillary fixed
restoration is supported by softer bone. The hardness of the
bone is related to its strength. The mandible more often has
hard (strong) bone and the maxilla most often has softer bone.
In fact, the posterior maxillary bone might be five to 10 times
weaker than the hard bone of the anterior mandible.
The maxillary anterior arch receives a force at a 12- to 15-
degree angle during occlusion and up to a 30-degree angle in
excursions. A 15-degree angled force increases the force component by 25.9 percent and a 30-degree force increases the force by
50 percent.
The excursive forces in a maxillary restoration come from
within the arch to push outside the arch. This force direction
on an arch is more detrimental than in the mandible. The
mandible receives a force from outside of the arch toward the
inside of the arch, which is the direction of force the arch was
designed to resist.
The maxillary arch usually has shorter implants than the
mandible (since the vertical height of bone is less compared to
the anterior mandible). The shorter implants have less surface
area and higher stresses, especially in soft bone. A literature
review reports a failure rate three times higher in full-arch maxillary
implant fixed restorations compared to full-arch implants
and a mandibular restoration.
Aesthetic retreatments and speech complications are more
often observed in the maxillary restoration compared to the
mandible prosthesis. The air can escape between the residual
ridge and prosthesis, and aesthetic requirements for the
patients are primarily obtained by the maxillary restoration. In
other words, the maxillary full-arch restoration should be treatment
planned differently and cost more than a similar restoration
in the mandible.
To compensate for the softer bone and higher biomechanical
stress, the maxillary arch should more often have bone augmentation
(to eliminate posterior cantilevers), more implants
inserted and higher prosthetic fees than a mandibular arch. The
fees for an implant treatment plan that has fewer implants
and/or cantilevers should be greater than restorations supported
by more implants and/or without cantilevers (Figs. 2-8).


Summary
The fees associated with implant surgery and prosthetic
rehabilitation should be related to the risks related
to the treatment. The treatment plan in implant dentistry
should have a biomechanical rationale to decrease stress to
the implant system. The risks in dentistry are a factor
which should be included in the cost of most all procedures
that are associated with greater complications. The
implant and associated restoration is not a commodity in
which the cost is solely related to the number of implants
and prosthetic units.
References
1. Goodacre CI, Bernal G, Rungcharassaeng K. Clinical complications with implants and implant prostheses. J Prosth Dent 90: 121- 132, 2003.
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