putting dental implants when you have osteoporosis

Posted by melia7 @melia7, Jan 5 12:18pm

My doctor advised me to fix my dental problems before starting to take the medicine ( bisphosphonate). As I lack several teeth, I need to make implants. I know that my jaws will lack calcium and I shall need injection of strengthening tissue. Still, will implant hold when there are processes in the body that eliminate calcium from bones? Ha anyone made implants with this diagnosis and how it has gone?

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Melia, I had many implants done when younger and they worked very well. Two years ago I tried to have implants done again and the dentist told me that I had to have bone implants first, which I did, with atrocious pain! When it healed after a few months , lots of money and more pain, the dentist told me that there was still not enough bone to put the implants, and I would have to have a second bone implant! I just then rushed out of his office with the plan to never see him ever again. A lot of other dentists proposed the same thing but I refused. I know it is harder to eat with less teeth but I could not go thru that suffering again. Plus when the opioids were still legal it was easier to take the horrible pain. Now forget it for me even if I had it offered for free.

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Ask your endodontist to advise you.

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@tilou

Melia, I had many implants done when younger and they worked very well. Two years ago I tried to have implants done again and the dentist told me that I had to have bone implants first, which I did, with atrocious pain! When it healed after a few months , lots of money and more pain, the dentist told me that there was still not enough bone to put the implants, and I would have to have a second bone implant! I just then rushed out of his office with the plan to never see him ever again. A lot of other dentists proposed the same thing but I refused. I know it is harder to eat with less teeth but I could not go thru that suffering again. Plus when the opioids were still legal it was easier to take the horrible pain. Now forget it for me even if I had it offered for free.

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I found this information on a endodontist Laboratory Risk Assessment for Patients taking oral bisphosphonates

CTX Value Risk for ONJ
300 to 600 pg/ml (normal) none
150 to 299 pg/ml none to minimal
101 to 149 pg/ml moderate
Less than 100 pg/ml high
They do a CTX valuation.

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@kristie2

I found this information on a endodontist Laboratory Risk Assessment for Patients taking oral bisphosphonates

CTX Value Risk for ONJ
300 to 600 pg/ml (normal) none
150 to 299 pg/ml none to minimal
101 to 149 pg/ml moderate
Less than 100 pg/ml high
They do a CTX valuation.

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I dont take bisphosphonates and dont plan to take any anymore after a bad experience. Nevertherless thank you for your input.

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@kristie2

I found this information on a endodontist Laboratory Risk Assessment for Patients taking oral bisphosphonates

CTX Value Risk for ONJ
300 to 600 pg/ml (normal) none
150 to 299 pg/ml none to minimal
101 to 149 pg/ml moderate
Less than 100 pg/ml high
They do a CTX valuation.

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Thank you for the CTX table - it is very helpful. But this is what's puzzling me and I hope someone can enlighten me.

I have read that high CTX numbers imply high bone turnover and higher fracture risk. Anti-resorptives like Fosamax have the effect of slowing bone turnover leading to lower CTX numbers. It was in fact proposed in a PubMed article that the lower half of the premenopausal range be set as a target for treatment i.e. 50-190 pg/ml for CTX. So I had been under the impression that low CTX numbers are something to aim for. But judging from your table, it seems that the lower the CTX numbers, the higher the risk of ONJ. Am I missing something?

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@surefire

Thank you for the CTX table - it is very helpful. But this is what's puzzling me and I hope someone can enlighten me.

I have read that high CTX numbers imply high bone turnover and higher fracture risk. Anti-resorptives like Fosamax have the effect of slowing bone turnover leading to lower CTX numbers. It was in fact proposed in a PubMed article that the lower half of the premenopausal range be set as a target for treatment i.e. 50-190 pg/ml for CTX. So I had been under the impression that low CTX numbers are something to aim for. But judging from your table, it seems that the lower the CTX numbers, the higher the risk of ONJ. Am I missing something?

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Per McCormick he said that the preferred range is 200-300 range.
I understand your concerns .

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@surefire

Thank you for the CTX table - it is very helpful. But this is what's puzzling me and I hope someone can enlighten me.

I have read that high CTX numbers imply high bone turnover and higher fracture risk. Anti-resorptives like Fosamax have the effect of slowing bone turnover leading to lower CTX numbers. It was in fact proposed in a PubMed article that the lower half of the premenopausal range be set as a target for treatment i.e. 50-190 pg/ml for CTX. So I had been under the impression that low CTX numbers are something to aim for. But judging from your table, it seems that the lower the CTX numbers, the higher the risk of ONJ. Am I missing something?

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I'm reading bone markers related information these days...

Can it be interpreted this way: when a person is treated with an antiresorptive, both CTX and P1NP are suppressed. CTX is the one usually used for antiresorptive therapy monitoring. So when it is extremely low, below 150 worse yet below 100, there are little chances to form new bones hence little chance for healing. Normally one would need CTX and P1Np at certain level for bone remodeling.

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@kristie2

Per McCormick he said that the preferred range is 200-300 range.
I understand your concerns .

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Thank you - the 200-300 range suggested by Dr McCormick fits in nicely - it's close to the target range of 50-190 as per this article:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4162466/
and also within the minimal to no risk ranges for ONJ of 150-600

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@mayblin

I'm reading bone markers related information these days...

Can it be interpreted this way: when a person is treated with an antiresorptive, both CTX and P1NP are suppressed. CTX is the one usually used for antiresorptive therapy monitoring. So when it is extremely low, below 150 worse yet below 100, there are little chances to form new bones hence little chance for healing. Normally one would need CTX and P1Np at certain level for bone remodeling.

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Yes, that's an astute interpretation and i agree. Dr McCormick's preferred range of 200-300 mentioned by kristie aligns with that interpretation. I have also read somewhere that, if you need dental work while on bisphosphonates, you should stop temporarily to allow the CTX values to rise first

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@tilou

Melia, I had many implants done when younger and they worked very well. Two years ago I tried to have implants done again and the dentist told me that I had to have bone implants first, which I did, with atrocious pain! When it healed after a few months , lots of money and more pain, the dentist told me that there was still not enough bone to put the implants, and I would have to have a second bone implant! I just then rushed out of his office with the plan to never see him ever again. A lot of other dentists proposed the same thing but I refused. I know it is harder to eat with less teeth but I could not go thru that suffering again. Plus when the opioids were still legal it was easier to take the horrible pain. Now forget it for me even if I had it offered for free.

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to tilou
Thank you so much for sharing your experience! I thought that it bone implants that I need as well are complicated, but never imagine that it is also painful.

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