What is the difference between a one-phase immediately
loaded implant and a traditional two-phase implant?
There are several significant
differences between the two implant families. The most important of these are
the following.
– The one-phase implant is implanted in a single phase. Consequently, the dental
implantation of an implant is a single intervention. The two-phase implant implantation
takes two phases.
– The one-phase
implant is loadable immediately. That means, among other things, that the long-term
temporary denture made after implant placement is attachable to the implants.
That is not the case with two-phase ones.
– These implants consist of a single piece. That
makes dental implantation easier, reducing the time spent on implantation.
– The one-phase
implant is implantable not only in the tooth bone but also in the jaw bone. This
type of dental
implantation is usable in case of bone deficiency. Two-phase is
not.
– These implants are
implantable not only perpendicularly but also at a different angle. It is essential
in the case of bone deficiency because it enables the most suitable bone tissue
to be obtained. There is no such possibility with two-phase implants.
- Using a one-phase
implant - for the reasons listed so far - most likely makes bone replacement
unnecessary.
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