Purpose: This study investigated pain experience and anxiety following dental implant placement using questionnaires and salivary cortisol measurements.
Materials And Methods: Patients about to undergo implant placement were instructed to keep recovery diaries to assess pain experience (limitation of activities, postoperative symptoms) and to record average pain, worst pain, and interference with daily activities on a visual analog scale (VAS). To assess anxiety, patients completed the Spielberger self-evaluation questionnaire and collected salivary samples to measure cortisol levels. Saliva was collected 1 week before surgery, the day of surgery, and 3 and 6 days postoperatively. A repeated-measure analysis of variance was used to analyze pain and anxiety data.
Results: Eighteen patients (12 women and 6 men) who received 30 implants were recruited for the study. Following implant placement, most patients reported mild to moderate interference with daily activities and postoperative symptoms. No patient reported high levels of any symptom. Average pain experience decreased significantly with time (F = 6.17; P < .001), from a VAS score of 24/100 on day 1 to 12 on day 3 and 9 on day 6. Worst pain (F = 7.84; P < .001) and limitation of daily activities (F= 6.26; P < .001) were also highest on the first postoperative day; they also decreased to about half the maximum level by the second or third day. State anxiety, as evaluated by the Spielberger self-evaluation scale, was highest on the day of surgery. The salivary cortisol level did not validate this, as it did not differ with the time of collection (F = 2.22; P = .075).
Conclusions: Patient self-assessment indicates that implant placement is a mild to moderately painful and anxiety-provoking procedure. Some limitation of daily activities and symptoms are expected to occur, particularly during the first 3 postoperative days.
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J Oral Implantol
December 2024
School of Dentistry, Section of Periodontics, University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California, United States.
Unlabelled: Peri-implantitis (PI) is an inflammatory disease that affects supportive tissues around dental implants, and its progression eventually leads to bone loss and implant failure. However, PI effects may be different based on the presence or absence of adjacent teeth.
Objective: To investigate the differences in bone loss and inflammation between implants placed adjacent to a tooth or edentulous area in a ligature-induced PI model.
Oper Orthop Traumatol
December 2024
Department for Orthopaedic and Trauma Surgery, Lucerne Cantonal Hospital LUKS, Spitalstrasse, Lucerne, Switzerland.
Objective: To maximize local tumor control, stabilize affected bones, and preserve or replace joints with minimal interventional burden, thereby enhancing quality of life for empowered living.
Indications: Suitable for patients with bone metastases, particularly those with severe pain and/or fractures and appropriate life expectancy.
Contraindications: In primary bone tumors, refer to the sarcoma surgery team for evaluation of wide resection.
Plast Aesthet Nurs (Phila)
December 2024
Sowmya Srinivas, BDS, MDS, PhD, is an Assistant Professor at the Department of Prosthodontics, JSS Dental College and Hospital, JSS Academy of Higher Education and Research, Mysore, Karnataka, India.
Placing an implant immediately into extraction sockets provides a distinct advantage over delayed placement, eliminating the need for a 4 to 6 months waiting period for bone formation. However, when patients present with hypothyroidism, the feasibility of immediate placement of dental implants becomes uncertain. This case involved a hypothyroid woman in her late 60s with loose lower anterior teeth.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVet Comp Orthop Traumatol
December 2024
Surgery Department, Evidensia Dierenziekenhuis Hart van Brabant, Waalwijk, Brabant, The Netherlands.
Objective: To describe percutaneous fluoroscopy-guided placement of self-drilling, self-tapping, 3.0 mm cannulated headless compression screws (HCS) for surgical reduction of sacroiliac luxation (SIL) in cats, and to document clinical outcome.
Materials And Methods: Medical records of cats with SIL, managed by percutaneous fluoroscopy-guided placement of a 3.
Contraception
December 2024
Department of Environmental Health Sciences, Columbia Mailman School of Public Health, New York, NY.
Objectives: Our goal was to measure the impact of postpartum implant insertion timing on breastfeeding success and duration in a population at high-risk for low milk supply.
Study Design: We conducted a three-armed randomized non-inferiority study of postpartum people who plan to breastfeed and have known risk factors for low milk supply. Participants were randomized to one of three groups for the timing of implant placement: within 30 minutes of placental delivery, 24-72 hours postpartum, or 6+ weeks postpartum.
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