In-vitro study of microtrauma following insertion of self-tapping or self-drilling mini-implants into a postmortem human mandible

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Abstract

Introduction: The study investigated the formation of microcracks surrounding self-tapping and self-drilling mini-implants, depending on whether pilot drilling was performed beforehand. A postmortem human mandible used for measurement of microstructural damage. The null hypothesis proposed that the method of mini-implant insertion would not affect the formation or progression of microcracks in the cortical bone of the mandible. The alternative hypothesis assumes that self-drilling screws cause greater cortical damage than self-tapping screws. Methods: On a mandible with soft tissues removed, a 50-square reference grid was applied to the bone surface. Subsequently, 20 self-tapping and 20 self-drilling miniscrews (tomas®-pin, tomas®-pin SD; Dentaurum, Ispringen, Germany) were inserted. Additionally, pilot drillings without implant placement, were created and served as control drillings. The grid was then cut into 50 bone blocks, followed by horizontal separation of 100-μm-thick cortical discs to be evaluated for periimplant microcracks and structural irregularities by light and electron microscopy. The effects of the three groups were analyzed using seperate one-way analyses of variance (ANOVA) for each variable. In addition, the non-parametric Kruskal–Wallis test was applied, due to the violations of the normality assumption. To maintain a significance level of 5%, pairwise post hoc comparisons were performed using the Bonferroni correction. Results : A similar number of microcracks, as well as comparable crack length, accumulated crack length, and crack width, were observed around both self-drilling and self-tapping Temporary Anchorage Devices (TADs). Minimal microcrack formation was observed around pilot preparations without TAD insertion. Conclusion: No significant differences in microcrack formation were observed between self-drilling and self-tapping insertion techniques. Future clinical studies may explore regional differences in microcrack distribution within the jaw.

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