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22 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back
What to give patients after the surgery?
Info
CHX
Painkillers
Ice (not proven for healing)
Sterile gauze
What to give patients after the surgery?
Info
CHX
Painkillers
Ice (not proven for healing)
Sterile gauze
When is first control
1 week
When is first control
1 week
What to do during first control
suture removal
healing of tissues
oral hygien
What to do after 1 week?
continue with CHX
replace CHX with gel and single tuft brush
What to do during first control
suture removal
healing of tissues
oral hygien
advantage of tuft brush?
keeps CHX local to the implant area
mechanical actions to remove plaque
What to do after 1 week?
continue with CHX
replace CHX with gel and single tuft brush
advantage of tuft brush?
keeps CHX local to the implant area
mechanical actions to remove plaque
Loading is received when?
after about 6 to 12 weeks
After prosthetics are placed what to give to patient?
info
interdental brushes
or super floss
or single tuft brush
Implant ID card!!!
When a patient with an implant comes for a check up what do you check for?
Access to oral hygiene
Oral hygiene method
Baseline data (changes in pocket depth?)
Decide when to see them next
Who is at risk?
! history of Periodontitis!
! smokers!
! systemisk disease!
! oral hygiene
How often to see the high risk patients?
between 4 to 6 months
What to do in the follow up check up?
Update medical history, risk
Probing
Plaque index
control reconstruction
PA Radio
Clean and polish
Why is it easy to overestimate pocket depth in implant patients?
No horizontal fibres attached to implant to impede probe.
when the tissues are inflammed the probe easily reaches into deep pocket
So what if there is big pocket? Is this always the problem?
Not always the problem because implants are sometimes placed very deep (eg. 5-6mm) for aesthetic reasons.
Always check the Dental Implant ID card to check the initial pocket depth.
Radiographic findings in periimplantitis?
crater like bone destruction; equal destruction on all sides.
Radiographs are specific but not sensitive.
Explain what this means
If you see in lesion in a radiograph then there is definitely a problem.
But just because lesion is not shown it doesn't mean problems don't exist.
how to diagnose peri-implant mucositis?
plaque induced

redness
swelling
BOP
how to diagnose peri-implant mucositis?
marginal bone loss
depeening pockets
pus
no pain
no mobility until the very last mm is exposed