In the current study, we investigated the cortical response of the somatosensory cortex following thermal stimuli to dental implants. Five implants were inserted at the site of the left upper canine with immediate implant placement protocols in five cats. Intrinsic signal optical imaging was applied to measure the cortical responses evoked by thermal sensing via dental implants. The cortical response evoked by 60 g of tactile stimulus to implants was also examined. The response strength and activated location were compared between implants and natural teeth. Thermal stimuli via the implant could evoke reliable cortical responses in the tooth-related region. However, the response amplitude evoked by the cold stimuli applied to the implants was significantly lower than that evoked by the cold stimuli applied to the natural teeth, indicating that the implants were less sensitive to thermal change than the natural tooth. The response evoked by tactile stimuli to implants was significantly stronger than that evoked by cold stimuli. Thermal and tactile stimuli activated the same location of the tooth-related somatosensory cortex in both the implants and natural teeth. Therefore, the thermal change in implants could be detected at the cortical response level. Multimodal sensory integration of thermal and tactile functions existed for implants.
Keywords: Dental implant; Intrinsic signal optical imaging; Somatosensory cortex; Thermal stimuli.
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