The effect of cigarette smoking habits on the outcome of dental implant treatment

The aim of this study was to analyze the influence of smoking habits and other possibly relevant factors on dental implant survival. The study population included all patients who underwent dental implants between the years 1999 and 2008 at a large military dental clinic and were examined in the per...

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Main Authors: Dror Twito, Paul Sade
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2014-09-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/546.pdf
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spelling doaj-ffe37ad7a6644564bad912ae8609dda42020-11-25T00:05:29ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592014-09-012e54610.7717/peerj.546546The effect of cigarette smoking habits on the outcome of dental implant treatmentDror Twito0Paul Sade1Department of Oral Rehabilitation, Medical Corps, IDF, Tel-Hashomer, IsraelDepartment of Oral Rehabilitation, Medical Corps, IDF, Tel-Hashomer, IsraelThe aim of this study was to analyze the influence of smoking habits and other possibly relevant factors on dental implant survival. The study population included all patients who underwent dental implants between the years 1999 and 2008 at a large military dental clinic and were examined in the periodic medical examination center.Correlation between implant characteristics and patients’ smoking habits, as mentioned in the questionnaire answered by patients in the periodic examination, was performed.Besides standard statistical methods, multiple linear regression models were constructed for estimation of the relative influence of some factors on implant survival rate. The long-term results of the implant treatment were good. The study refers to 7,680 implants. 7,359 (95.8%) survived and 321 (4.2%) did not survive. Concerning smoking habits, in a uni-variable analysis, factors found to have an association with implant survival were the smoking status of the patients (smoking/no smoking), the amount of smoking, passive smoking, and the time elapsed in ex-smokers from the time they ceased smoking to the time of implantation. In a multi-variable analysis, factors found to have an association with implant survival were smoking status (smoking/no smoking) and amounts of smoking as expressed in pack years.https://peerj.com/articles/546.pdfImplant failureImplant survivalTobacco
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dror Twito
Paul Sade
spellingShingle Dror Twito
Paul Sade
The effect of cigarette smoking habits on the outcome of dental implant treatment
PeerJ
Implant failure
Implant survival
Tobacco
author_facet Dror Twito
Paul Sade
author_sort Dror Twito
title The effect of cigarette smoking habits on the outcome of dental implant treatment
title_short The effect of cigarette smoking habits on the outcome of dental implant treatment
title_full The effect of cigarette smoking habits on the outcome of dental implant treatment
title_fullStr The effect of cigarette smoking habits on the outcome of dental implant treatment
title_full_unstemmed The effect of cigarette smoking habits on the outcome of dental implant treatment
title_sort effect of cigarette smoking habits on the outcome of dental implant treatment
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2014-09-01
description The aim of this study was to analyze the influence of smoking habits and other possibly relevant factors on dental implant survival. The study population included all patients who underwent dental implants between the years 1999 and 2008 at a large military dental clinic and were examined in the periodic medical examination center.Correlation between implant characteristics and patients’ smoking habits, as mentioned in the questionnaire answered by patients in the periodic examination, was performed.Besides standard statistical methods, multiple linear regression models were constructed for estimation of the relative influence of some factors on implant survival rate. The long-term results of the implant treatment were good. The study refers to 7,680 implants. 7,359 (95.8%) survived and 321 (4.2%) did not survive. Concerning smoking habits, in a uni-variable analysis, factors found to have an association with implant survival were the smoking status of the patients (smoking/no smoking), the amount of smoking, passive smoking, and the time elapsed in ex-smokers from the time they ceased smoking to the time of implantation. In a multi-variable analysis, factors found to have an association with implant survival were smoking status (smoking/no smoking) and amounts of smoking as expressed in pack years.
topic Implant failure
Implant survival
Tobacco
url https://peerj.com/articles/546.pdf
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