PetCaseFinder

Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Clinical and biomechanical determinants of immediate, early, progressive, and delayed implant loading: A comprehensive narrative review.

Year:
2026
Authors:
Kishen A et al.
Affiliation:
Sri Venkateshwaraa Dental College · India

Abstract

The protocols for implant loading have changed considerably over the years. Branemark's old way of delaying loading has become trendier at present. Today, we have immediate and early protocols being widely used. These latest methods try to shorten treatment time while ensuring that osseointegration remains stable. As the surface technology of implants has become advanced and as digital planning and biomechanical understanding have improved so much, the older concepts of safe functional loading can be redefined. There is still clinical uncertainty about the long-term predictability of early load initiation for implants of varying quality and design. This review critically reviews recent (2019-2025) evidence into the biologic and biomechanical principles, clinical and decision-making principles for immediate, early, progressive and delayed loading of implants. The goal is to create an effective, evidence-based framework that practitioners can use for loading selection according to patient-specific factors, bone density and primary stability. To achieve the aim, a structured narrative review was conducted, which involved the databases including PubMed, Scopus, ScienceDirect and Wiley Online Library. The literature was searched using Boolean search strings that combined appropriate MeSH terms pertaining to 'dental implants', 'osseointegration', 'loading protocol' and 'primary stability'. Seventy-two studies (24 RCTs, 28 cohort studies and 20 systematic reviews/Meta-analysis) that met the inclusion criteria were qualitatively analyzed. When insertion torque was ≥ 35 N.cm, implant survival rates were between 95 and 100% in immediate and early loading protocols, comparable to that of delayed protocols. Similarly, for ISQ ≥ 70 and bone quality Type I-II. The difference in mean marginal bone loss between early and late loading was less than 0.2 mm at 12 months, which is clinically insignificant. Excess occlusal load, low bone density (type IV) and absence of prosthetic splinting were associated with failures. The implant bone interface in low-density bone improved as upgrades were made with progressive loaders. Implants in the lower jaw were more predictable than in the upper jaw. Immediate loading and early loading are both reliable if the biomechanical and biologic prerequisites are satisfied. This is a significant change from time-based loading to mechanically and biologically guided loading. Ways of working in the future will be AI-assisted torque analysis, digital bone-density mapping and biomimetic implant surfaces that enhance osseointegration under controlled functional load. Clinical Significance: Clinicians should determine the time of implant loading according to objective parameters rather than according to fixed timelines. Properly done immediate or early loading can shorten treatment time, improve patient satisfaction and provide long-term predictability comparable to those achieved with delayed approaches.

Find similar cases for your pet

PetCaseFinder finds other peer-reviewed reports of pets with the same symptoms, plus a plain-English summary of what was tried across them.

Search related cases →

Original publication: https://europepmc.org/article/MED/41963615