# Mini-implant placement under existing removable partial dentures decreased the mobility of remaining teeth in a randomized controlled 3-year clinical trial

**Authors:** Torsten Mundt, Ahmad Al Jaghsi, Friedhelm Heinemann, Christian Schwahn

PMC · DOI: 10.1007/s00784-025-06340-2 · Clinical Oral Investigations · 2025-04-24

## TL;DR

Placing mini-implants under existing dentures reduced tooth mobility over three years, regardless of immediate or delayed loading.

## Contribution

Demonstrated that mini-implants can stabilize loose teeth under removable partial dentures in a 3-year clinical trial.

## Key findings

- Tooth mobility significantly decreased in both immediate and delayed loading groups.
- No significant difference in tooth survival rates between the two loading groups.
- Mini-implants effectively restabilized loose teeth in jaws with unfavorable tooth distributions.

## Abstract

Longitudinal stability values of teeth after strategic implant insertion under existing removable partial dentures (RPD) are lacking. This explorative evaluation of a 3-year randomized controlled trial on strategic min-implants (MI) aims to estimate the stability changes of the remaining teeth and the tooth survival rates under different MI loading conditions.

Partially edentulous study participants of a university clinic and three private practices with inadequately supported RPDs received strategic MIs (diameter 1.8–2.4 mm). According to the randomization the MIs were either immediately loaded in group A or delayed loaded in group B. The longitudinal changes of Periotest values (PTV) for teeth were compared between groups using mixed models adjusted by sex, age, jaw, tooth site, center, and baseline PTVs. The tooth survival was estimated with Kaplan-Meier analyses and group differences were analyzed using Cox regression.

Altogether 232 MIs were placed under 48 mandibular and 31 maxillary RPDs with a total of 255 remaining teeth in both jaws. The initial median PTV of 9.5 in group A and 8.0 in group B decreased to 5.0 in group A and 2.0 in group B at the 3-year follow-up. In the fully adjusted model the tooth mobility reduction revealed 5.3 PTV units (95% CI: 3.5–7.2) in group A and 7.6 PTV units (95% CI: 5.4–9.9) in group B without inferiority of any group (P = 0.122). The 3-year tooth survival rates were 88% in group A versus 92% in group B without relevant group differences (P = 0.338).

Strategic MIs under existing RPDs in persons with severe reduced dentitions decreased the mobility of the remaining teeth independent from implant loading modus. Further tooth loss can emerge despite of relieving the remaining dentition by the MIs.

Mini-implants as supplementary abutments can restabilize loose teeth in jaws with RPDs and unfavorable tooth distributions.

German Clinical Trials Register (Deutsches Register Klinischer Studien, DRKS-ID: DRKS00007589, www.germanctr.de), January 15th, 2015.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** tooth loss (MESH:D016388), tooth mobility (MESH:D014086)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

_Full body text omitted from this summary view._ Fetch the complete paper as Markdown: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12021952/full.md

## Figures

6 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12021952/full.md

## References

3 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12021952/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12021952