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Why some dental implants work and others don’t

Two commonly-used drugs affect implant integration - one helps, the other hinders
Published: 25 October 2016

Each year, about 500,000 North Americans get dental implants. If you are one of them, and are preparing to have an implant, it might be a good idea to start taking beta blockers, medication that controls high blood pressure, for a while. And to stop taking heartburn pills.

A body of research from McGill led-teams indicates that in order to raise the odds that dental implants will attach properly, there are clear benefits to taking certain common medications and avoiding others.

Bone cell growth, healing and death

 “The success of procedures like dental implants depends mainly on how the existing bone accepts the implants to create a connection between the living bone and the surface of the implant,” says Prof. Faleh Tamimi, who teaches in the McGill Faculty of Dentistry, and is the senior author on a number of papers published on the subject in recent weeks. “Because some medications affect bone metabolism and the way that bone cells heal and multiply or die, they can have an important effect on the success of implants.”

The McGill research team reviewed data about the integration of dental implants gathered from over 700 patients who were operated on at the East Coast Oral Surgery Clinic in Moncton, New Brunswick between 2007-2015. They then confirmed the results they saw in human patients through studies in rats.

Implications for hip and knee replacements

“We believe that this research may have implications for orthopedic interventions such as hip and knee replacements, because the same mechanisms of bone cell growth break down, and healing take place in all the bones in the body,” says Tamimi. “Our work with implants in rats suggest that this is indeed the case, but further research will be needed to confirm it.” 

Drugs that aid integration of implants – Beta blockers

  • Conclusions are based on 1499 dental implants in 728 patients between Jan. 2007 – Sept. 2013 at the East Coast Oral Surgery in Moncton, New Brunswick
  • 327 implants were in 142 people who took beta blockers for hypertension
  • 1172 implants were in 586 people who didn’t take beta blockers 
  • Failure rates of implants for people using beta blockers was 0.6%
  • Failure rates of implants in people who don’t take beta blockers was 4.1% 
  • More than 640 million patients around the world take beta blockers to control hypertension.

“We carried out this study because we knew that beta blockers have been reported to increase bone formation,” says Prof. Tamimi from McGill’s Faculty of Dentistry. “So we thought it was possible that they would also decrease the risk of failure of dental implants. However we didn’t expect that there would be such a clear difference in the failure rates for implants between users and non-users of beta blockers. Randomized clinical trials will need to be carried out as well as other studies of large numbers of patients to investigate this phenomenon in more depth.”

Drugs that impede integration of dental implants – Heartburn treatment

  • Conclusions are based on 1773 dental implants in 799 patients between Jan. 2007- Sept. 2015 at the East Coast Oral Surgery in Moncton, New Brunswick
  • 133 implants were in 58 people who took heartburn medication
  • 1640 implants were in 741 people who don’t take heartburn medication
  • Failure rates of implants for people using heartburn medication were 6.8%
  • Failure rates of implants for people not taking heartburn medication were 3.2%
  • More than 20 million Americans, about one in 14 people, take heartburn medication. 
  • Heartburn medication is rapidly becoming the third most prescribed pharmaceutical product worldwide, especially for elderly people, who take it either on an occasional or long-term basis.

 “Scientists already knew that drugs for heartburn reduce calcium absorption in bones and generally increase the risk of bone fractures,” says Faleh Tamimi, of McGill’s Faculty of Dentistry. “That is why we wanted to look at how it affects the integration of implants and bone healing after this type of surgery. But we didn’t expect to find that the negative effects of these type of drugs would be as great as they are. Further work will need to be done to find the appropriate dosages and time periods that people should take or avoid these medications.”

To read the full articles on effects of

Beta blockers

In humans: “Antihypertensive medications and the survival rate of osseointegrated dental implants: A cohort study” by X. Wu et al in Clinical Implant Dentistry and Related Research:

This research was funded by: The China Scholarship Council, Clifford Wong Fellowships, James P. Lund Fellowship in Dentistry, Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR), Institutes of Musculoskeletal Health and Arthritis (IMHA), and the Le Réseau de recherche en santé buccodentaire et osseuse (RSBO), Canada Research Chair program

In rats:  “Propranolol enhances bone healing and implant osseointegration; an in vivo study on rats’ tibiae” by A. Al Subaie et al -

This research was funded by: Canadian Institute of Health Research (CIHR), the Saudi Arabian Cultural Bureau in Canada, Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC), the Canadian Foundation for Innovation (CFI), AO Foundation, and International Team for Implantology (ITI).

Heartburn medication

In humans: “Proton pump inhibitors and the risk of osseointegrated dental implant failure: A cohort study” by X. Wu et al in Clinical Implant Dentistry and Related Research 

This research was funded by: The China Scholarship Council, Clifford Wong Fellowships, James P. Lund Fellowship in Dentistry, Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR), Institutes of Musculoskeletal Health and Arthritis (IMHA), and the Le Réseau de recherche en santé buccodentaire et osseuse (RSBO), Canada Research Chair program

In rats:  “Systemic administration of Omeprazole interferes with bone healing and implant osseointegration: An in vivo study on rat tibiae” by A. Al Subaie et al in The Journal of Clinical Peridontology:

This research was funded by: Canadian Institute of Health Research (CIHR), the Saudi Arabian Cultural Bureau in Canada, Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC), the Canadian Foundation for Innovation (CFI), AO Foundation, and International Team for Implantology (ITI).

To contact the researchers directly: 

Faleh Tamimi, Faculty of Dentistry, Ď㽶ĘÓƵ (English interviews)
faleh [dot] tamimi [at] mcgill [dot] ca

Dr. Samer Abi-Nader, Faculty of Dentistry, Ď㽶ĘÓƵ (French interviews)
samer [dot] abi-nader [at] mcgill [dot] ca

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