Implant surgery can be performed two fundamentally different ways: freehand (the surgeon drills based on visual and tactile judgment in real time) or computer-guided (a pre-fabricated surgical guide physically directs the drills along a digitally-planned path). The difference in precision is measurable — and in complex cases, clinically meaningful.
Freehand Surgery
For decades, freehand was the only option. The surgeon plans the general implant position from 2D or 3D imaging, then executes surgically based on direct visualization. Experienced operators achieve excellent results with this approach — it remains a legitimate technique in skilled hands. The limitation is human: even the most experienced surgeon cannot consistently replicate a digital plan to sub-millimeter accuracy in the real anatomy.
Computer-Guided Surgery
A CBCT scan is imported into implant planning software. The final prosthesis is designed first. The implant is virtually positioned to optimally support that prosthesis. A physical surgical guide is then 3D-printed that seats precisely onto the patient’s teeth, bone, or mucosa and directs every drill along the exact planned path.
Studies comparing guided to freehand show guided surgery achieves angular deviations of 2-4° on average versus 5-10° for freehand, and positional deviations within 1 mm versus 1.5-2 mm.
Where the Precision Difference Matters
- Full-arch cases — small angular errors compound across 4-6 implants, magnifying prosthetic compromises
- Anterior aesthetic zone — 1 mm off in the front tooth region is visibly different
- Limited bone anatomy — cases with proximity to sinuses, nerves, or adjacent tooth roots
- Immediate loading — provisionals are pre-fabricated to match the planned positions; the surgery has to hit the plan
Flapless Surgery
Full-guide protocols often allow flapless surgery — the implant is placed through a small punch in the gum rather than a full surgical flap. Patients have less swelling, less post-op pain, and faster healing. Flapless is only possible with guided surgery; it’s one of the major patient-experience benefits.
When Guided Surgery Isn’t Used
Simple single-implant cases with abundant bone and straightforward anatomy can be placed safely freehand by experienced surgeons. Complex cases — multiple implants, full-arch, aesthetic zone, compromised anatomy — should always be guided in a modern specialist practice.
What We Do
Every implant case at our practice is planned in CBCT-based software. Full-arch cases (the STAR Concept™) are fully guided with pre-fabricated provisionals. Complex anterior and multi-implant cases are fully guided. Simple single-tooth cases in straightforward anatomy may use partial guidance or guided drilling depending on clinical factors.
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- Immediate Dental Implants in Boston
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