Differential Attachment of Engineered Oral Soft Tissues to Implant Surfaces
Nour Jalaleddine, Emilia Barker, Kirsty Franklin, Mohamed Jamal, Momen A. Atieh, Zaid H. Baqain, Keyvan Moharamzadeh

TL;DR
This study compares how different dental implant surfaces affect the attachment of oral tissues, finding that rough titanium surfaces and smooth commercial abutments support better tissue integration.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel in vitro model to evaluate differential soft tissue attachment to various implant and abutment surfaces.
Findings
Epithelial attachment was greater on TiZr-SLA, ZrO2-P, and PEEK-M surfaces compared to TiZr-M and ZrO2-M.
TiZr-SLA surfaces showed the highest connective tissue attachment.
Commercial titanium and ZrO2 healing abutments demonstrated the highest soft tissue viability and attachment.
Abstract
Background/Objectives: The formation of a soft tissue seal through mucosal integration around dental implants is critical for potentially achieving long-term peri-implant health and clinical success. Understanding how different implant and abutment surfaces interact with individual layers of the oral mucosa remains limited. This study aimed to compare the differential attachment of tissue-engineered oral epithelium, connective tissue, and full-thickness human oral mucosa to various implant and abutment materials and surface topographies. Methods: Sand-blasted, large-grit, acid-etched (TiZr-SLA), machined TiZr (TiZr-M), machined zirconia (ZrO2-M), polished zirconia (ZrO2-P), and machined PEEK rods, along with commercially available titanium and ZrO2 healing abutments, were inserted into 3D oral mucosal models following a 4-mm punch biopsy. Inflammation was induced using Escherichia coli…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDental Implant Techniques and Outcomes · Bone Tissue Engineering Materials · Periodontal Regeneration and Treatments
