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Showing posts with the label #Osseointegration

Osseointegration Explained: What Happens at the Bone-Implant Interface

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Implant success is rarely decided on the day of surgery itself. It is decided during healing. Most failures traced in follow-ups are not caused by placement errors alone but by what happens afterward, at the microscopic level between bone and implant surface.  This biological phase determines whether a restoration functions for decades or begins to loosen within a few months. In this guide we will focus on the biological and mechanical events after placement, healing stages, interface mechanics, component roles, and common clinical mistakes that interfere with predictable integration. What Is Osseointegration? Osseointegration is the direct connection between living bone and an implant surface without soft tissue in between. The concept was discovered in the 1950s when researchers noticed bone cells attach strongly to titanium. Today, this biological bonding is the foundation of modern implant dentistry. When a  titanium screw implant  is placed in the jawbone, th...

Titanium Dental Implant Screws: Types, Torque Values, And How To Prevent Loosening?

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Titanium dental implant screws play a critical role in long-term implant success, especially when it comes to torque values and preventing loosening over time.   Understanding how these screws work, what torque range is safe, and how to manage forces in the mouth helps clinicians protect both the restoration and the patient’s trust. Let’s get to know how titanium dental implant screws work, ideal torque values, and practical ways to prevent screw loosening for long-term implant stability.   What is a Titanium Dental Implant Screw? A  titanium screw implant  is a small, precision-machined screw that connects the dental implant body (the “root” in the bone) to the abutment or directly to the crown.  It’s usually made from medical‑grade titanium or titanium alloy, chosen for its strength, biocompatibility, and resistance to corrosion in the mouth. These screws are not just “generic” fasteners; they’re engineered to work with a specific implant system (e.g., in...