Journal of Clinical Medicine (Mar 2024)

Quantification and Influence of IL-1β on Pain and Inflammatory Response after Placement of a Cement–Screw-Retained Restoration

  • Lady Arbelaez-Bonozo,
  • Serafín Maza-Solano,
  • María Baus-Domínguez,
  • Raquel Gómez-Díaz,
  • Gonzalo Ruiz-de-Leon-Pacheco,
  • Daniel Torres-Lagares,
  • María-Angeles Serrera-Figallo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm13061669
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 6
p. 1669

Abstract

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Background: The objective of this study was to evaluate the pain and inflammatory response in soft tissues using healing and prosthetic abutments of different diameters and lengths. Methods: The study population was rehabilitated with Astra Tech EV single implants (Dentsply Sirona, Atlantis, Dentsply Sirona S.A., Barcelona, Spain) of 4.2 and 4.8 millimetres in diameter in the upper and lower maxilla and loaded with custom abutments digitally designed using Dentsply Sirona’s Virtual Atlantis Design software (Atlantis WebOrder, Dentsply Sirona S.A., Barcelona, Spain), version 4.6.5. The custom abutments had a larger diameter than the healing abutments to evaluate for biomarkers through ELISA. Results: Rehabilitations in the mandible and with healing abutments with diameters less than 4.29 mm and rehabilitators with diameters less than 2.18 mm elicited a higher pain and inflammatory response and, in turn, higher interleukin-1β values. Conclusions: Greater inflammation was evident in cases in which healing abutments with reduced diameter were used compared to the same subsequent rehabilitation with prosthetic abutments with larger diameters.

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