Jaime Del Río
Complutense University of Madrid
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Publication
Featured researches published by Jaime Del Río.
Journal of Dentistry | 2010
Miguel Gómez-Polo; Blanca Llidó; Antonia Rivero; Jaime Del Río; Alicia Celemín
OBJECTIVE The aim of this retrospective study was to compare the cumulative survival rate of teeth restored with prefabricated posts and with cobalt-chrome cast post-cores. METHODS 112 endodontically treated teeth restored with prefabricated post and cobalt-chrome cast post-and-cores were evaluated. Teeth were considered as failures when were objective or radiologic sign of endodontic failure, post or root fracture, or when they had been extracted at the moment of the evaluation. Kaplan-Meiers method was used to reconstruct the survival curves of the restorations and to test the variable type of post-and-core restoration. RESULTS 93 of the posts were still in function without clinical or radiographic signs of failure at the time of the examination resulting in a survival rate of 83.03% after a mean follow-up period of 10.08 years. When comparing the two techniques, prefabricated posts showed a slightly higher survival rate: 84.6% versus 82.6%.Focusing on tooth-type, maxillary premolars (n=30) had the highest failure rate (30%) and also the lowest mean lifetime, with 6-and-a-half years. Maxillary incisors (n=20) showed the highest success rate (5%) with only one case of failure. CONCLUSIONS The results showed no significant difference between both groups after a 10-year average follow-up.
Medicina Oral Patologia Oral Y Cirugia Bucal | 2013
Carmen Perea; María-Jesús Suárez-García; Jaime Del Río; Daniel Torres-Lagares; Javier Montero; Raquel Castillo-Oyagüe
Objectives: To investigate the differences in impact on oral health-related quality of life (OHRQoL) among complete denture wearers depending on their socio-demographic characteristics, prosthetic-related factors and oral status. Study Design: 51 patients aged 50-90 years treated, from 2005 to 2010, with at least one complete denture at the Department of Buccofacial Prostheses of the Complutense University (Madrid) were enrolled in this cross-sectional study. All of the participants answered the Oral Health Impact Profile (OHIP-14sp) questionnaire. The additive scoring method was used. The prevalence of impacts was calculated by using the occasional threshold (OHIP-14sp score≥2). Socio-demographic and prosthetic-related variables were gathered. Patients underwent clinical examination to assess their oral condition. Descriptive probes and Chi-Square tests were run (p≤0.05). Results: The predominant participants’ profile was that of a man with a mean age of 69 years wearing complete dentures in both the maxilla and the mandible. The prevalence of impact was 23.5%, showing an average score of 19±9.8. The most affected domains were “functional limitation” and “physical pain”, followed by “physical disability”. Minor impacts were recorded for the psychological and social subscales (“psychological discomfort”, “psychological disability”, “social disability” and “handicap”). The prosthesis’ location significantly influenced the overall patient satisfaction, the lower dentures being the less comfortable. Having a complete removable denture as antagonist significantly hampered the patient satisfaction. Patients without prosthetic stomatitis and those who need repairing or changing their prostheses, recorded significantly higher OHIP-14sp total scores. Conclusions: The use of conventional complete dentures brings negative impacts in the OHRQoL of elderly patients, mainly in case of lower prostheses that required reparation or substitution, with a removable total denture as antagonist. The prosthetic stomatitis in this study was always associated to other severe illness, which may have influenced the self-perceived discomfort with the prostheses, as those patients were daily medicated with painkillers. Key words:Oral Health Impact Profile (OHIP), oral health-related quality of life (OHRQoL), patient satisfaction, complete denture, elderly patients.
Journal of Dentistry | 2013
Arelis Preciado; Jaime Del Río; Christopher Daniel Lynch; Raquel Castillo-Oyagüe
OBJECTIVES This study aimed to validate the Quality of Life with Implant-Prostheses (QoLIP-10) questionnaire for assessing the impact of screwed implant-supported rehabilitations on oral health-related quality of life (OHRQoL). METHODS 131 patients wearing screw-retained implant restorations were assigned to the following groups: Group 1 (HP; n=50): fixed-detachable hybrid prostheses (control), Group 2 (S-PD; n=43): metal-ceramic screwed partial dentures, and Group 3 (S-CD; n=38): metal-ceramic screwed complete dentures. Impacts on OHRQoL were evaluated using the QoLIP-10 and Oral Health Impact Profile (OHIP-14sp) scales. Data on global oral satisfaction, socio-demographics, health-behaviours, and prosthetics were gathered. Reliability and validity of the QoLIP-10 were investigated for screwed prosthesis wearers. The Spearmans rank test was applied to determine the correlation between both indices. Descriptive and non-parametric probes were run to evaluate the influence of the study variables on OHRQoL. RESULTS The QoLIP-10 confirmed its psychometric capacity for screwed prosthesis wearers. Both tests were inversely correlated. HP wearers reported the worst dental-facial aesthetics, performance, and functional limitation outcomes. Gender, education level, complaints about the mouth, perception of treatment needs, and prosthetic status modulated the OHRQoL. CONCLUSIONS Screwed implants restorations provide better OHRQoL than do fixed-detachable hybrid prostheses.
Journal of Prosthetic Dentistry | 2017
Miguel Gómez-Polo; Cristina Gómez-Polo; Jaime Del Río; Rocío Ortega
Immediate post-extraction and same-day placement of interim prostheses have increased patient acceptance of implant-supported prostheses. However, for immediate prostheses supported by multiple implants, meeting passive fit and esthetic standards is often challenging. In this clinical report, implant photogrammetry was combined with conventionally obtained digitized casts to prepare an interim, milled prosthesis from a polyoxymethylene (POM) disk, using computer-aided design and computer-aided manufacturing techniques. The following 2 conclusions were drawn. First, stereophotogrammetric scanning appears to be a reliable method for making impressions of immediate, implant-supported partial prostheses, and second, POM is suitable for preparing immediate interim screw-retained prosthetic implants.
Journal of Dentistry | 2012
Arelis Preciado; Jaime Del Río; María-Jesús Suárez-García; Javier Montero; Christopher Daniel Lynch; Raquel Castillo-Oyagüe
Journal of Dentistry | 2013
Arelis Preciado; Jaime Del Río; Christopher Daniel Lynch; Raquel Castillo-Oyagüe
Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery | 2016
Miguel Gómez-Polo; Rocio Ortega; Cristina Gómez-Polo; Cristina Martín; Alicia Celemín; Jaime Del Río
Journal of Dentistry | 2016
Raquel Castillo-Oyagüe; María-Jesús Suárez-García; Carmen Perea; Jaime Del Río; Christopher Daniel Lynch; Esther Gonzalo; Daniel Torres-Lagares; Arelis Preciado
Journal of Dentistry | 2015
Carmen Perea; Arelis Preciado; Jaime Del Río; Christopher Daniel Lynch; Alicia Celemín; Raquel Castillo-Oyagüe
Journal of Dentistry | 2015
Carmen Perea; Jaime Del Río; Arelis Preciado; Christopher Daniel Lynch; Alicia Celemín; Raquel Castillo-Oyagüe