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Title

A retrospective evaluation of bone graft success, implant survival rate and marginal bone loss

 

Authors

Laxman Singh Kaira1,*, Virag Srivastava2, Sauvik Mazumdar3, Ishita Mudgal4, Karandeep Singh5, Ashish Prajapati6 & Megha Patel7

 

Affiliation

1Department of Dentistry, GMC, Datia, Madhya Pradesh, India; 2Department of Dentistry, Government Medical College, Haldwani, Uttarakhand, India; 3Department of Dentistry, JMN Medical College and Hospital, Chakdaha, Nadia, West Bengal, India; 4Department of Prosthodontics, Shri Aurobindo College of Dentistry, Indore, Madhya Pradesh, India; 5Department of Oral & Maxillofacial Surgery, SGT University, Budhera Village, Gurugram, Haryana, India; 6Department of Oral & maxillofacial surgery, Kalka dental college, Meerut, Uttar Pradesh, India; 7Department of Pediatric and Preventive Dentistry, Karnavati School of Dentistry, Karnavati University, Gandhinagar, Gujarat, India; *Corresponding author

 

Email

Laxman Singh Kaira - E-mail: laxmansingh6@gmail.com
Virag Srivastava - E-mail: drvirag@gmail.com
SauvikMazumdar - E-mail: drsauvikmds@gmail.com
IshitaMudgal - E-mail: ishitamudgal@live.com
Karandeep Singh - E-mail: karandeepsingh_fdsc@sgtuniversity.org
Ashish Prajapati - E-mail: ashishprajapati8488@gmail.com
Megha Patel - E-mail: meghapatel@karnavatiuniversity.edu.in

 

Article Type

Research Article

 

Date

Received June 30, 2025; Revised June 30, 2025; Accepted June 30, 2025, Published June 30, 2025

 

Abstract

Bone grafting serves to restore the alveolar bone defect, providing adequate alveolar bone essential for long-term implant survival. Therefore, it is of interest to evaluate bone graft success, implant survival rate and marginal bone loss. Hence, data from 85 patients showed 112 implants performed in grafted sites achieved a 95.5% survival rate and the bone grafting success reached 92.8%. Auto-genous grafts displayed higher functionality than allografts and xenografts did. At 12 months the mean marginal bone loss measured 1.12 ± 0.28 mm according to graft classification and implant placement site (p<0.05). Bone grafting shows its effectiveness for improving implant stability and achieving enduring success within patients who need large bone grafts.

 

Keywords

Bone graft, dental implants, implant survival, marginal bone loss, osseointegration, graft success

 

Citation

Kaira et al. Bioinformation 21(6): 1534-1538 (2025)

 

Edited by

Hiroj Bagde MDS, (PhD), PGDCR, PGDHHM, PGDL, PGDM

 

ISSN

0973-2063

 

Publisher

Biomedical Informatics

 

License

This is an Open Access article which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly credited. This is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License.