Dental Implants — solutions for every profile, even with insufficient bone

Standard implants, subperiosteal implants for atrophied bone, or zygomatic implants without grafting. Assessment of your situation and solution proposed best suited to your anatomy.

A dental implant is the closest replacement to a natural tooth. Fixed directly into the jawbone, it serves as an artificial root onto which a crown, bridge, or full prosthesis is attached. Unlike removable dentures, an implant does not move, does not affect adjacent teeth, and preserves bone volume.

The main challenge with conventional implants is the bone volume required. After tooth loss, bone naturally resorbs. Subperiosteal implants anchor into deep cortical bone, and zygomatic implants use the cheekbone as an anchor — often eliminating the need for bone grafting and significantly reducing treatment time.

Every treatment plan is developed from a CBCT scan (3D computed tomography), which allows precise visualization of bone anatomy before any procedure.

Procedures we offer

  1. Standard implants

    A conventional solution anchored in the alveolar bone. Ideal when bone volume is sufficient. Provides durable and functional results.

  2. Subperiosteal implants (atrophied bone)

    Designed for patients with severe bone loss. Anchored to dense cortical bone, often avoiding the need for extensive and costly bone grafting.

  3. Zygomatic implants (graft-free)

    An alternative to sinus grafting. Anchored in the zygomatic bone (cheekbone). Allows for full upper jaw rehabilitation without the need for bone reconstruction.

  4. Full arch rehabilitation

    Reconstruction of a full dental arch using 4 to 6 implants and a fixed prosthesis. A long-term solution for complete edentulism.

Frequently asked questions

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