Who’s the father of modern dental implantology?
Definition of osseointegration.
How’s Wolff’s law defined?
How much bone width and bone height gets lost one year after exodontics?
What are the 4 phases of osseointegration?
Describe the first phase of osseointegration.
What adheres to the titanium surface?
Describe the 2nd phase of osseointegration.
Name 2 hormones that get released.
How long does it take?
Describe the 3th phase of osseointegration.
What’s the 4th phase of osseointegration?
What happens?
What do you torque a dental implant to?
How much vertical bone loss can you maximal have per year to call the implant a success?
What’s the difference between survival and success of an implant?
In which patients shouldn’t you use ibuprofen?
In which patients shouldn’t you use paracetamol?
Classification of the dental treatment.
Say, if it is Type 1, 2, 3 or 4.
Complicated extractions
Bone augmentations
Multiple single extractions
Implants throughout the arch
Multiple implants with little trauma to the tissues
Bilateral breast elevations
Simple extraction
Block autologous bone grafts
Unilateral breast lifts
What’s the usual anaesthetic regime after oral surgery?
What function have calcium channel blocking agents?
What can they cause?
Antihypertensive medication can lead to? (4)
How high can the systolic and diastolic pressure max. be? (to be able to place implants)
Anders formuliert: At which point do you need to postpone the treatment?
What’s the describtion of mild, moderate and unstable severe angina?
How or in which way can you perform dental treatment of the classification Type 1, 2, 3, 4 in:
Angina
Moderate Angina
Severe Angina
?
Name 6 indications for antibiotic prophylaxis.
Endocarditits prophylaxis
Which AB do you use for general prophylaxis? (+ dose)
If they do not tolerate orally? (+ dose)
If they are allergic to penicillin? (3 options + dose)
If they are allergic to penicillin and do not tolerate orally? (+ dose)
Patients with cardiac valve prostheses should wait … - … after such surgery to perform the appropriate implant treatment.
Diabetes mellitus
In low-risk patients (blood glucose <150mg/dL) how does the treatment differ in: Type 1, Type 2, Type 3 and Type 4 procedures?
Which factors do you need to take into account in diabetes patients, that are relevant in surgery? (3)
So which 3 things should be checked/done?
Patients treated with radiotherapy have a higher chance of suffering from? (4)
Should you place implants before or after radiotherapy?
And how long before or after?
What are Bisphosponates used for?
Mechanism of action?
Name 4 possible complications of BFFs after an oral surgical procedure.
What’s a reliable indicator for the level of risk of developing osteonecrosis?
When are C-telopeptides (CTx) released?
Which CTx values do you have for:
no risk of osteonecrosis
none-minimum risk
moderate risk
high risk
Is the risk higher when bisphosphonates are given orally or intravenously?
Which type of drug is contraindicated in patients taking bff?
If the patient takes bisphosphonates iv, what should you avoid in every case?
Which sex suffers more often from osteonecrosis due to bisphosphonates?
Implant management:
The patient takes oral bisphosphonates for >3 years, which 3 things need to be done/taken into account?
The patient takes oral bisphosphonates for <3 years without clinical or radiographic risk factors, which 3 things need to be done/taken into account?
The patient takes oral bisphosphonates for <3 years with clinical or radiographic risk factors, which 3 things need to be done/taken into account?
Which kind of treatment can be a good option to reduce the failure rate when placing implants in patients undergoing radiotherapy?
What’s usually a better treatment option than bisphosphonates?
And why?
Can you do implant treatment in patients receiving any type of chemotherapeutic agent?
If so, in which case?
What’s the half-life of warfarin sodium?
What’s the MOA of warfarin?
Do you need to stop medication with warfarin before a surgical procedure?
If the patient takes warfarin or also in general:
INR value has which therapeutic range?
What’s the INR value in a normal, healthy patient?
What’s the procedure if the INR is above 3, especially above 4?
Aspirin has an antiplatelet effect if you apply … - … mg/kg
Last changed2 years ago