Thanks to immediate loading, it is possible for patients to get dental implants and show off a healthy and beautiful set of teeth on the same day. A widely endorsed technique with excellent success rates when conducted by skilled and experienced specialists.
For almost 30 years, the Dental Clinic IDIM in Valencia has been caring for its patients’ dental health. Its multidisciplinary staff, scholarly publications on the matter, rigorous training, and extensive expertise have enabled it to establish itself as a clinic specializing in immediate loading of dental implants.
Immediate loading: dental implants in a day
Immediate loading of dental implants offers a distinct advantage over conventional loading: immediate loading allows for the placement of a fixed prosthesis on the implants immediately after surgery or within a maximum of 24–48 hours. As a result, the patient does not get to be and see himself without his teeth, thus greatly reducing the impact on a psychological level.
Immediately loaded implants have a success rates equivalent to conventional loading. It is, however, regarded as a sophisticated implantology procedure, and it is critical that it be performed by experienced and fully qualified specialists who also have the necessary tools.
What exactly is an immediate loading treatment?
Dental implants take approximately 2 months to osseointegrate. Conventional loading means waiting that long before the new teeth can be fabricated and placed in the patient’s mouth. This forces the patient to be edentulous or to use removable provisional prostheses that are often uncomfortable.
In contrast, immediate loading involves taking the necessary records and fabricating a provisional fixed prosthesis very quickly to place it within the first 24-48 hours after surgery.
The following are the essential conditions for immediate loading:
1) When inserting the implants, aim for excellent primary stability. This is determined by the patient’s bone quality and the surgeon’s surgical expertise.
2) Excellent communication and coordination between the dental clinic and the laboratory. In this regard, having clear protocols and the appropriate digital technology helps to accelerate and simplify the processes to be able to give predictable, successful results with immediate loading.
When immediate loading is performed, a temporary resin prosthesis is always used. The patient should eat soft foods during osseointegration because, while the implants are stable, the bone requires time to grow and mineralize.
The therapy concludes after 2-3 months with the making of the final ceramic prosthesis. However, the temporary prosthesis is not only beneficial during those months, but it will also act as a “rescue” so that if the final prosthesis fails one day, the patient will not have to go toothless while the problem is resolved.
Dr. Peñarrocha, specialist in dental implantology in Valencia
Dr. Miguel Peñarrocha, a specialist in dental implantology, serves as a scientific advisor to the IDIM dental clinic. He has over 35 years of clinical and teaching experience, as well as over 500 research publications.
To ensure the success of the immediate loading therapy, IDIM conducts a thorough examination of each patient, which they share with the dental laboratory. They customize each treatment for each patient; in this way, the provisional prosthesis may be put in place in 24 hours, and the outcome is comfortable and esthetic.
Children in Spain exceed more than two times the amount of added sugars recommended by the WHO.
Spanish kids reportedly consume 55.7 grams of added sugars per day, while the world’s main health body suggests not to go over 25 daily grams.
These figures have been published as part of a study undertaken by Granada University, in which 1,775 adults who have children aged between 7 and 12 have taken part.
The research further states that “65% of the added sugar comes from low-nutrient-density foods.”
Examples of these include white sugar, sweets, cocoa powder, soft drinks, ice cream, biscuits, industrial cakes, chocolate bars, biscuits and sports drinks.
The study finds it ‘very striking’ that parents have a ‘good perception’ of a number of foods and drinks of poor nutritional value and a high content of added sugar.
Spain was identified by the WHO as the third European country with the highest percentage of overweight children last year.
Children in Spain exceed more than two times the amount of added sugars recommended by the WHO.
Spanish kids reportedly consume 55.7 grams of added sugars per day, while the world’s main health body suggests not to go over 25 daily grams.
These figures have been published as part of a study undertaken by Granada University, in which 1,775 adults who have children aged between 7 and 12 have taken part.
The research further states that “65% of the added sugar comes from low-nutrient-density foods.”
Examples of these include white sugar, sweets, cocoa powder, soft drinks, ice cream, biscuits, industrial cakes, chocolate bars, biscuits and sports drinks.
The study finds it ‘very striking’ that parents have a ‘good perception’ of a number of foods and drinks of poor nutritional value and a high content of added sugar.
Spain was identified by the WHO as the third European country with the highest percentage of overweight children last year.
A VIRAL tweet has sparked lively online debate about how often Spaniards shower compared to their European counterparts. The answer? Less than the Italians but more than the French.
The discussion began when a Twitter user named Xavi Ruiz shared a graphic based on data from The Global Index and Wikipedia with percentages of inhabitants who shower every day.
For Spain, the figure is 75 to 84%, while in Italy the figure was 95% and above. France and the UK, meanwhile, came in at 65% or below, while neighbouring Portugal was at 85 to 94%.
The tweet had racked up more than 12 million views by Monday, with 2,227 retweets, 5,142 quote tweets and more than 14,600 “likes”.
As reported by Spanish online daily El Español, the tweet prompted a shower (!) of responses, with some users questioning the validity of the data and others arguing that a daily dose of water and soap is unnecessary.
“Experts say that washing too frequently can strip the body of its self-regulating microbiome, the microorganisms that live on the skin and help control the levels of oil,” wrote one Twitter user, linking to an article arguing that ‘science suggests you should not shower every day anymore’.
Others pointed to the need in hotter countries such as Spain, Portugal and Italy for more regular ablutions. “If it’s hotter, you are going to sweat more,” wrote one user.
And of course there were plenty of jokes from Spaniards about the high figure for their own country.
“Then you catch the bus and you wonder where that high percentage is exactly,” wrote one user called Bahamut.
“I understand that the climate [in the north] plays an important role but that’s not an excuse to not take a shower,” wrote Kat. “I don’t know why anyone would want to live there by choice.”
And one Spanish user pointed to their experience at music festivals in the UK.
“At the showers in Glastonbury it was just foreigners in the queue,” he wrote. “And the only Europeans were Spaniards!”