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The role of foreign body response in peri-implantitis: What is the evidence? | LitMetric

The role of foreign body response in peri-implantitis: What is the evidence?

Periodontol 2000

School of Dentistry, The University of Queensland, Herston, Queensland, Australia.

Published: October 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • The concept of osseointegration has traditionally been viewed as a stable relationship between titanium dental implants and bone, with peri-implantitis seen primarily as a plaque-induced inflammation leading to bone loss.
  • Recently, some researchers propose that osseointegration may be driven by inflammatory responses to foreign bodies (like implants), which could change our understanding of peri-implant bone loss.
  • The review assesses evidence regarding a persistent foreign body response due to implants and explores whether materials like titanium particles contribute to peri-implantitis, ultimately suggesting that current data supports the idea of osseointegration as a stable state rather than one characterized by ongoing foreign body reactions.

Article Abstract

Historically, there has been broad consensus that osseointegration represents a homeostasis between a titanium dental implant and the surrounding bone, and that the crestal bone loss characteristic of peri-implantitis is a plaque-induced inflammatory process. However, this notion has been challenged over the past decade by proponents of a theory that considers osseointegration an inflammatory process characterized by a foreign body reaction and peri-implant bone loss as an exacerbation of this inflammatory response. A key difference in these two schools of thought is the perception of the relative importance of dental plaque in the pathogenesis of crestal bone loss around implants, with obvious implications for treatment. This review investigates the evidence for a persistent foreign body reaction at osseointegrated dental implants and its possible role in crestal bone loss characteristic of peri-implantitis. Further, the role of implant-related material release within the surrounding tissue, particularly titanium particles and corrosion by-products, in the establishment and progression in peri-implantitis is explored. While it is acknowledged that these issues require further investigation, the available evidence suggests that osseointegration is a state of homeostasis between the titanium implant and surrounding tissues, with little evidence that a persistent foreign body reaction is responsible for peri-implant bone loss after osseointegration is established. Further, there is a lack of evidence for a unidirectional causative role of corrosion by-products and titanium particles as possible non-plaque related factors in the etiology of peri-implantitis.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9804527PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/prd.12456DOI Listing

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