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NOT YET RECRUITING
NCT07475416
NA

Effect of Mandibular Drilling Speed on Implant Stability and Osteogenic Potential: A Randomized Clinical Trial

Sponsor: Cairo University

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

This randomized clinical trial aims to evaluate the effect of different low-speed biological drilling protocols on implant stability and the osteogenic potential of autogenous bone particles collected during implant osteotomy. Patients requiring single dental implant placement in the mandible will be randomly assigned to different drilling speed protocols without irrigation. Implant stability will be measured clinically, while collected bone particles will be analyzed for osteogenic markers. The study aims to determine whether biological drilling improves implant stability and preserves the regenerative potential of autogenous bone.

Official title: Impact of Mandibular Biological Drilling Speeds on Implant Stability and Osteogenic Potential of Autogenous Bone Particles: A Randomized Clinical Trial

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

20 Years - 60 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

36

Start Date

2026-03-15

Completion Date

2027-04-01

Last Updated

2026-03-16

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

PROCEDURE

Implant osteotomy using biological drilling at 50 rpm without irrigation.

Implant osteotomy will be performed using low-speed biological drilling at 50 rpm without irrigation. Bone particles produced during drilling will be collected for evaluation of osteogenic potential.

PROCEDURE

Implant osteotomy using biological drilling at 150 rpm without irrigation.

Implant osteotomy will be performed using biological drilling at 150 rpm without irrigation. Autogenous bone particles generated during drilling will be collected and analyzed for osteogenic potential.

PROCEDURE

Implant osteotomy using biological drilling at 300 rpm without irrigation.

Implant osteotomy will be performed using biological drilling at 300 rpm without irrigation with collection of autogenous bone particles for laboratory analysis.