Peri-implant Soft Tissue Conditioning with Provisional Restorations in the Esthetic Zone: The Dynamic Compression Technique

2013 ◽  
Vol 33 (4) ◽  
pp. 447-455 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julia-Gabriela Wittneben ◽  
Daniel Buser ◽  
Urs C Belser ◽  
Urs Brägger
2015 ◽  
Vol 62 (4) ◽  
pp. 196-201
Author(s):  
Vojkan Lazić ◽  
Ana Todorović ◽  
Igor Djordjević ◽  
Nataša Milošević ◽  
Danica Popović ◽  
...  

Summary Aesthetic outcome of implant therapy involves the appropriate architecture of peri-implant soft tissue and interdental papilla. The dynamic compression technique of soft tissue is mentioned in contemporary literature as one of the methods for achieving optimal emergence profile. The aim of this case report was to present soft tissue prosthetic modeling with temporary crowns on implants for obtaining an emergence profile of final restoration. A 25-year-old female patient with missing left maxillary central incisor was referred to the Department of Oral Surgery School of Dental Medicine University in Belgrade for dental implant placement. After detailed planning, implant placement of Straumann Bone level implant NC Ø 3, 3×12 mm (Straumann® Bone Level NC), in the position of 21 was performed. Upon completion of osseointegration period, screw retained laboratory temporary crown was fabricated. During the next 3 months emergence profile was scalloped by creating additional pressure on the soft tissue with periodic adding the composite resin material to a temporary crown. The created emergence profile was transferred to the master cast by using customized impression coping, making possible fabrication of the final implant restoration according to the design made with provisional restoration. Soft tissue conditioning using temporary dental restorations on implants presents a non-invasive method with predictable aesthetic result.


1999 ◽  
Vol 12 (03) ◽  
pp. 102-107 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. Gibson ◽  
S. Carmichael ◽  
D. Bennett ◽  
A. Li

SummaryThirteen pancarpal arthrodeses were performed in eleven dogs at the University of Glasgow Veterinary School. All of the animals were presented as referral patients. Two of the eleven dogs had the procedure carried out in both carpi. The arthrodeses were carried out using a 2.7/3.5 mm hybrid dynamic compression platea. The animals were between 1 year and 11 years of age. Their weight ranged from 15 kg to 38 kg. Two cases had associated soft tissue trauma/infection prior to the surgery; these two dogs together with one other developed post-operative soft tissue problems. The soft tissue problems had resolved by the time of radiographic arthrodesis. The plate was removed in three cases due to persistent lameness. The animals were followed up for a period of at least eight weeks postoperatively; the maximum follow-up time was fourteen months. Arthrodesis occurred in all thirteen antebrachio-carpal joints. The hybrid plate can thus be recommended for carpal arthrodesis in the dog and has many advantages over a conventional dynamic compression plate.Pancarpal arthrodeses were performed in dogs using custom made 2.7/3.5 mm Hybrid Dynamic Compression Plates instead of conventional AO/ASIF Dynamic Compression Plates (DCP). The implantation of the plates was facilitated by their profile and the usage of smaller 2.7 mm screws in the metacarpal regions. All of the carpi went on to full arthrodesis within the follow-up period. The rate of complications associated with the use of this plate compares favourably against previous similar studies using the conventional DCP.


2016 ◽  
Vol 41 (1) ◽  
pp. 2-7 ◽  
Author(s):  
ME Miranda ◽  
KA Olivieri ◽  
FJF Rigolin ◽  
AA de Vasconcellos

SUMMARY The rehabilitation of an unesthetic smile in the anterior maxilla is always a clinical challenge, especially when an improper shape and size, old restorations, and unesthetic shading are present. In addition, an irregular gingival zenith contour in the anterior maxilla can affect the smile's harmony. Thus, detailed treatment planning is needed to define a functional and esthetic prosthetic rehabilitation. This study describes a clinical case in which a 55-year-old woman was rehabilitated using Digital Smile Design planning and full ceramic crowns (metal free) in the anterior zone of the maxilla and mandible. To normalize the gingival zenith, a dynamic compression technique was performed using provisional restorations to condition the gingival tissues and harmonize the proportional length of the anterior upper teeth.


2008 ◽  
Vol 101 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
R. F. Smith ◽  
J. H. Eggert ◽  
M. D. Saculla ◽  
A. F. Jankowski ◽  
M. Bastea ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
D. C. Swartzendruber ◽  
Norma L. Idoyaga-Vargas

The radionuclide gallium-67 (67Ga) localizes preferentially but not specifically in many human and experimental soft-tissue tumors. Because of this localization, 67Ga is used in clinical trials to detect humar. cancers by external scintiscanning methods. However, the fact that 67Ga does not localize specifically in tumors requires for its eventual clinical usefulness a fuller understanding of the mechanisms that control its deposition in both malignant and normal cells. We have previously reported that 67Ga localizes in lysosomal-like bodies, notably, although not exclusively, in macrophages of the spocytaneous AKR thymoma. Further studies on the uptake of 67Ga by macrophages are needed to determine whether there are factors related to malignancy that might alter the localization of 67Ga in these cells and thus provide clues to discovering the mechanism of 67Ga localization in tumor tissue.


Author(s):  
J. P. Brunschwig ◽  
R. M. McCombs ◽  
R. Mirkovic ◽  
M. Benyesh-Melnick

A new virus, established as a member of the herpesvirus group by electron microscopy, was isolated from spontaneously degenerating cell cultures derived from the kidneys and lungs of two normal tree shrews. The virus was found to replicate best in cells derived from the homologous species. The cells used were a tree shrew cell line, T-23, which was derived from a spontaneous soft tissue sarcoma. The virus did not multiply or did so poorly for a limited number of passages in human, monkey, rodent, rabbit or chick embryo cells. In the T-23 cells, the virus behaved as members of the subgroup B of herpesvirus, in that the virus remained primarily cell associated.


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