The Orthodontic Mini-implant Clinical Handbook. Richard Cousley

The Orthodontic Mini-implant Clinical Handbook - Richard Cousley


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rel="nofollow" href="#fb3_img_img_928e262f-e595-5844-869e-13d0607c6eec.jpg" alt="Photos depict the coronal slice views of a CBCT scan of the maxilla (a) before and (b) one month after insertion of mini-implants in palatal alveolar sites. The mini-implant, sited distal to the right maxillary first molar, has been inserted at a relatively vertical inclination and has perforated the maxillary sinus (b)."/>

      Mini‐implant fracture is thankfully a rare occurrence nowadays since most mini‐implant materials and designs do not easily fracture within the normal torque limits in clinical practice [53,54]. However, some studies, aimed at fracturing mini‐implants in hard acrylic blocks, have failed to allow for the low insertion torques experienced with many designs and especially in the case of self‐drilling body versions. Therefore, fractures due to poor clinical technique may be attributed incorrectly to mini‐implant weakness.

Photos depict the intraoral radiographs that are taken after (a) insertion of a cylindrically shaped mini-implant mesial to the maxillary first molar, and (b) its fracture near the coronal end of the body.

      There is often an expectation that high levels of pain will occur but the opposite is true, such that some patients appear to feel virtually no discomfort during and after insertion [57,58]. The majority of patients appear to experience mild pressure‐related pain at the time of insertion and up to 24 hours of low‐level pain thereafter. This is self‐limiting, controlled by simple analgesics (e.g. paracetamol or ibuprofen) and comparable (but of shorter duration) to other orthodontic experiences, such as the effects of separators and aligning archwires [59], and certainly much less than premolar tooth extractions [60]. The latter comparison is beneficial when it comes to explaining the likely pain experience to patients who already have a fixed appliance in situ.

      Assuming that the superficial soft tissues have been adequately anaethetised, mini‐implant insertions cause dental pain because of the pressure wave generated by insertion of a rigid fixture into a confined bone space. While there are no pain receptors within the bone tissues, if the pressure dissipates further it will reach the periodontal tissues of adjacent teeth, and hence stimulate their periodontal pain receptors. The patient will feel this as dental pain in the affected tooth. Fortunately, I think that it's within the orthodontist's scope to proactively reduce the level of pressure discomfort by diverging the roots of adjacent teeth prior to insertion (as described in Chapter 5). This creates more interproximal space and hence a greater distance between the mini‐implant site and the adjacent periodontal pain receptors. While there is no clinical evidence to support (or refute) this hypothesis, my experience is that patients with increased interproximal spaces complain of less pain both at the time of insertion and afterwards.

Photos depict the overgrowth of the labial sulcular tissues caused by these mandibular mini-implant insertions within loose mucosa in this orthognathic surgical case (a). Local anaesthetic infiltration injections were required for the hyperplastic tissue to be peeled off the implant heads for their removal (b).

      The majority of patients appear to experience mild pressure‐related pain at the time of insertion.


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