- Keeps the adjacent teeth healthy, to avoid jamming a natural toothpick, leaving them untouched and
healthy. - Maintenance and non-absorption of the alveolar bone, stimulates the maintenance of the bone as a
root of a natural jaw.
Comparing with a mobile, partial or full prosthetic denture, the advantages are: - the ability to chew, which is equivalent to that of the natural tooth resulting in nutritional
benefits and digestion, important for all age groups. - Maintenance of normal facial muscles, with the recovery of a more youthful and natural acne.
- Lack of gingival inflammation and pain associated with the mobility of prosthetics is not present.
- Greater confidence in speech and laughter, with a subsequent increase in quality of life.
What are the patients who can implant the implants?
-Anyone who does not have natural tooth elements and enjoys good health, can generally resort to
implant placement.
-Who has completed the growth phase, typically, 16 years for women, 18 for men.
- Patients who have undergone trauma and have lost some teeth.
- Patients using mobile or total mobile partial dentures.
In which patients is the biggest risk of losing an implant?
-To patients who have a significant bone atrophy (consumption), and where the patient is affected by
systemic illness.
– In patients with paradonthosis (gum disease) and where oral hygiene is very low. - In diabetic patients (when not regularly treated) as a result of high blood sugar levels, wound infection
may occur, wound closure occurs very slowly, and the implant integration process with the bone may
have problems.
-In patients who smoke or consume too much alcohol, there is a possibility of failure, but in cases where
the implant is successful, they affect its lifespan.
-Any allergic patient to the materials used in surgical intervention.
-The names of menopause, as well as cases of osteoporosis, are more likely to have a positive result on
implants.