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Título
Active tactile sensibility in implant prosthesis vs. complete dentures: A psychophysical study
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Osseoperception
Tactile sensibility
Interocclusal thickness
Interocclusal perception
Clasificación UNESCO
3201 Ciencias Clínicas
Odontología
Fecha de publicación
2022-11
Editor
MDPI
Citación
González-Gil, D., Dib-Zaitun, I., Flores-Fraile, J., & López-Marcos, J. (2022). Active Tactile Sensibility in Implant Prosthesis vs. Complete Dentures: A Psychophysical Study. Journal of clinical medicine, 11(22), 6819. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11226819
Resumen
[EN] Background and Objectives: Proprioceptive information from natural dentition and adjacent oral tissues enables correct masticatory function, avoiding damage to the teeth. Periodontium
is the main source of this relevant information, and when a tooth is lost, all this proprioceptive
sensibility relies on receptors from muscles, the mucous membrane or the temporomandibular joint,
and this sensibility gets worse. Active tactile sensibility measures this proprioceptive capability
in microns by psychophysical studies consisting of introducing thin metal foils between patients’
dental arches during chewing to see if they are able to notice them or not. Osseoperception is a
complex phenomenon that seems to improve this sensibility in patients wearing dental implants.
The objective of this investigation is to measure this sensibility in different prosthetic situations by
performing a psychophysical investigation. Material and Methods: We divided 67 patients in three
groups depending on their prosthetic situation and performed a psychophysical study by introducing
aluminium foils of different thicknesses in order to establish an active tactile sensibility threshold in
every group. We also measured variables such as prosthetic wearing time, age or gender to see how
they may influence threshold values. We used Student’s t-test and Mann–Whitney U tests to analyse
these results. Results: Active tactile sensibility threshold values in implants are lower than those from
complete dentures but higher than values in natural dentition. However, values in implants are closer
to natural dentition than complete denture values. Age, gender or prosthetic wearing time have no
influence in active tactile sensibility thresholds. Conclusion: Active tactile sensibility threshold values
depend on prosthetic rehabilitations and the mechanoreceptors involved in every situation. Implant
prosthesis presents an increased active tactile sensibility thanks to osseoperception phenomenon.
URI
DOI
10.3390/jcm11226819
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