Oates Thomas W, Galloway Patrick, Alexander Peggy, Vargas Green Adriana, Huynh-Ba Guy, Feine Jocelyn, McMahan C Alex
Dr. Oates is a professor, Department of Periodontics, School of Dentistry, University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, 7703 Floyd Curl Drive, MCS 7888, San Antonio, Texas 78229-3900, e-mail
Dr. Galloway is a former resident, Department of Periodontics, School of Dentistry, University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio.
J Am Dent Assoc. 2014 Dec;145(12):1218-26. doi: 10.14219/jada.2014.93.
The authors conducted a prospective cohort study to determine whether poor glycemic control is a contraindication to implant therapy in patients with type 2 diabetes.
The study sample consisted of 117 edentulous patients, each of whom received two mandibular implants, for a total of 234 implants. Implant-retained mandibular overdentures were loaded after a four-month healing period and followed up for an additional one year. The authors assessed implant survival and stability (by means of resonance frequency analysis) relative to glycated hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) levels, with baseline levels up to 11.1 percent and levels as high as 13.3 percent over one year.
Implant survival rates for 110 of 117 patients who were followed up for one year after loading were 99.0 percent, 98.9 percent and 100 percent, respectively, for patients who did not have diabetes (n = 47), those with well-controlled diabetes (n = 44) and those with poorly controlled diabetes (n = 19). The authors considered the seven patients lost to follow-up as having had failed implants; consequently, their conservative estimates of survival rates in the three groups were 93.0 percent, 92.6 percent and 95.0 percent (P = .6510). Two implants failed at four weeks, one in the nondiabetes group and the other in the well-controlled diabetes group. Delays in implant stabilization were related directly to poor glycemic control.
The results of this study indicate that elevated HbA1c levels in patients with type 2 diabetes were not associated with altered implant survival one year after loading. However, alterations in early bone healing and implant stability were associated with hyperglycemia.
作者进行了一项前瞻性队列研究,以确定血糖控制不佳是否为2型糖尿病患者植入治疗的禁忌证。
研究样本包括117例无牙患者,每人植入两颗下颌种植体,共234颗种植体。种植体支持的下颌覆盖义齿在4个月的愈合期后加载,并额外随访1年。作者评估了种植体的存留率和稳定性(通过共振频率分析)与糖化血红蛋白A1c(HbA1c)水平的关系,基线水平高达11.1%,1年内高达13.3%。
117例患者在加载后随访1年,其中110例患者的种植体存留率分别为:非糖尿病患者(n = 47)99.0%、血糖控制良好的糖尿病患者(n = 44)98.9%、血糖控制不佳的糖尿病患者(n = 19)100%。作者将7例失访患者视为种植体失败;因此,他们对三组存留率的保守估计分别为93.0%、92.6%和95.0%(P = 0.6510)。两颗种植体在4周时失败,一颗在非糖尿病组,另一颗在血糖控制良好的糖尿病组。种植体稳定延迟与血糖控制不佳直接相关。
本研究结果表明,2型糖尿病患者HbA1c水平升高与加载后1年种植体存留率改变无关。然而,早期骨愈合和种植体稳定性的改变与高血糖有关。