https://www.selleckchem.com/products/OSI-906.html A total of 15 implants failed after replacement in 11 patients during the first 6 months of follow-up. Of these, nine failures (15.25%) occurred in seven patients (13.21%) after immediate replacement, and six (9.09%) occurred in four patients (7.02%) who underwent delayed replacement. No statistically significant differences were detected between the two groups (P = 0.431). No significant differences in implant survival at sites of previous failure were found according to the timing of implant replacement. No significant differences in implant survival at sites of previous failure were found according to the timing of implant replacement. In recent years, dental malpractice claims have increased dramatically worldwide. The present study aimed to categorise and analyse claims related to implant dentistry that resulted in legal decisions in Israel, seeking to contribute to dental risk management and improve patient safety. This study analysed legal claims registered by Medical Consultants International between 2005 and 2015. Only closed cases in which a decision was made were included. The parameters studied included patient age and sex, date of the complaint, treatment setting (private/public clinic), description of the adverse event and type of negligence claimed. The cohort included 709 settled claims out of a total of 1066 that were litigated against dental practitioners in Israel during the study period. Of the patients included, 60.0% were women and 63.9% were aged 40 to 59 years. The most common treatment-related damage was neural injury in 133 patients (18.7% of the cohort). Unplanned changes in the treatment plan and violation of autonomy were the most frequent documentation-/information-related claims (66.3% and 32.7%, respectively). The legal responsibility of the dental practitioner was acknowledged in 89.0% of cases. Dental practitioners working in the private sector were more likely to be sued due to viol