Origins: The Paulo Malo Concept
The All-on-4 treatment concept was developed by Portuguese implantologist Dr. Paulo Malo in collaboration with Nobel Biocare in the late 1990s and formally published in peer-reviewed literature in 2003. The core insight was biomechanically elegant: by angulating the two posterior implants up to 45 degrees distally, clinicians could anchor into denser basal bone, extend the prosthetic arch further posteriorly, and avoid anatomical obstacles — most critically the maxillary sinus floor anteriorly and the inferior alveolar nerve in the mandible — without resorting to bone augmentation procedures.
Since its introduction, the concept has accumulated over two decades of long-term clinical evidence. A landmark 10-year prospective study published by Malo et al. (2012) demonstrated cumulative implant survival rates exceeding 94.8% in the maxilla and 98.1% in the mandible, cementing All-on-4 as an evidence-based standard of care for full-arch rehabilitation in the resorbed jaw.
Biomechanics of the Tilted Posterior Implant
The posterior tilt is not simply a workaround for insufficient bone volume — it is a deliberate biomechanical optimization. When a posterior implant is angled distally at 30–45 degrees, several concurrent advantages are achieved:
- Reduced cantilever length: The implant exit point shifts posteriorly, allowing the prosthetic bridge to terminate further distal without a long free-end cantilever. This dramatically reduces the bending moment at the most vulnerable prosthetic span.
- Greater cortical engagement: The angulated trajectory passes through denser basal and cortical bone, significantly improving primary stability and immediate load resistance compared to a straight implant in the same bone volume.
- Wider prosthetic support polygon: The divergent posterior implants increase the effective footprint of the four-implant construct, distributing occlusal loads more evenly and reducing peak stress at individual fixtures.
- Anatomical avoidance: In the maxilla, the 30–45° tilt bypasses the anterior wall of the sinus floor. In the mandible, it allows placement posterior to the mental foramen without nerve proximity risk.
Finite element analysis studies confirm that peak von Mises stress values at the bone-implant interface remain within physiologic remodeling thresholds when cantilever length is kept to ≤15 mm and all four implants achieve insertion torque ≥35 Ncm at placement.
All-on-4 vs. All-on-6: Selecting the Right Protocol
Choosing between four and six implants is governed by bone quality, arch morphology, occlusal demands, and clinical risk tolerance — not patient preference alone.
| Parameter | All-on-4 | All-on-6 |
|---|---|---|
| Implant count | 4 (2 anterior axial, 2 tilted posterior) | 6 (axial + posterior, various configurations) |
| Cantilever length | Up to 15 mm | Reduced or eliminated |
| Indicated bone class | D2–D4; reduced ridge volume | D1–D3; adequate ridge volume |
| Bone grafting required | Rarely | Sometimes in atrophic maxilla |
| Implant failure resilience | Lower (25% support lost per implant) | Higher (17% support lost per implant) |
| Molar reproduction | Limited to premolar region | Full posterior scheme possible |
| Cost to patient | Lower | Higher |
| Evidence base | Extensive (20+ years RCT data) | Growing (10+ years data) |
Clinical consensus favors All-on-6 when the patient presents adequate anterior bone volume, strong parafunctional habits (bruxism), or when the prosthetic plan calls for a full bilateral posterior occlusal scheme. All-on-4 remains the preferred choice when minimizing surgical invasiveness and cost is prioritized, and bone volume in the anterior zone is adequate for ≥10 mm implants with reliable primary stability.
Immediate Loading Protocol
The hallmark of the All-on-4 concept is delivery of a full-arch provisional prosthesis within 24–72 hours of implant placement — widely known to patients as "Teeth in a Day." Immediate loading is not merely a convenience feature; it is a protocol with specific biological and mechanical prerequisites that must be rigorously satisfied.
Minimum Insertion Torque: The 35 Ncm Threshold
All four implants must achieve a minimum insertion torque of 35 Newton-centimeters (Ncm) before immediate loading is indicated. Values of 45–70 Ncm are routinely achieved with contemporary tapered implant designs in compact bone. When any single implant fails to reach 35 Ncm, the protocol mandates either conversion to delayed loading (4–6 months conventional healing), placement of a rescue implant at an adjacent site, or — in favorable cases — upgrading to a larger diameter at the same osteotomy.
Provisional Prosthesis Requirements
The immediate temporary bridge must be engineered to protect osseointegration during the critical healing phase while maintaining function and esthetics for the patient:
- Rigid, non-flexing construction — typically milled PMMA or laboratory-processed heat-cured acrylic with a metal reinforcement bar
- Occlusion adjusted to minimal posterior contacts in lateral excursion (canine guidance or group function, no balancing-side contacts)
- Cantilever extensions limited to ≤15 mm distal of the most posterior implant centerline
- Passive fit confirmed before final screw tightening — even minor internal stress in the framework transfers directly to the implants
- Access holes sealed with PTFE tape + temporary composite, allowing retrievability for screw torque checks
Implant System Selection for All-on-4
The ideal implant for an All-on-4 protocol must deliver high primary stability in compromised bone, accommodate angled multi-unit abutments (MUAs) without connection compromise, and carry a robust evidence base for full-arch immediate loading scenarios.
Neodent Helix GM and Drive CM
Within the Neodent portfolio, two implants are particularly well-adapted for the All-on-4 protocol. The Neodent Helix GM features a tapered body with an aggressive double-lead thread geometry optimized for high insertion torque even in D3 and D4 bone. Its Grand Morse (GM) connection provides a deep internal conical interface that resists micro-movement under immediate loading — a critical property when the implant bears occlusal forces from day one of placement.
The Neodent Drive CM complements the Helix GM in the anterior mandible, where dense cortical bone can cause excessive countertorque with highly aggressive tapered designs. The Drive's progressive thread design captures crestal bone efficiently and achieves excellent rotational stability. Both systems are fully compatible with Neodent's angled MUA portfolio, available in 17° and 30° angulation options to redirect the prosthetic platform to a parallel axis after tilted posterior placement.
Straumann BLX
The Straumann BLX (Bone Level Tapered) has become one of the most specified implants for full-arch immediate protocols since its clinical introduction. Its variable-pitch VeloDrill preparation protocol and Roxolid alloy (titanium-zirconium) body — which is approximately 50% stronger than conventional Grade 4 titanium — allow maximum primary stability even when a narrower osteotomy is used. This is particularly valuable when placing implants in proximity to anatomical structures in the posterior quadrant. The BLX is fully compatible with Straumann's Pro Arch angled MUA system and carries substantial clinical documentation specifically addressing immediate loading in All-on-4 configurations.
Angled Multi-Unit Abutments: Managing the Posterior Tilt
The angulated posterior implant creates a prosthetic geometry challenge: a straight abutment on a 30–45° implant produces a screw access channel that emerges far palatally in the maxilla or lingually in the mandible. Angled MUAs — available in both 17° and 30° versions from Neodent, Straumann, and compatible third-party manufacturers — correct this by redirecting the prosthetic platform toward the occlusal plane.
- The 17° angled MUA is typically indicated for implants placed at approximately 30° to the occlusal plane
- The 30° angled MUA is indicated for implants tilted at 45°, particularly in maxillary All-on-4 cases where the sinus anatomy requires greater posterior angulation
After MUA placement, all four abutment platforms should present within ≤5° of parallelism to one another, simplifying impression technique, ensuring passive framework fit, and facilitating long-term prosthesis retrievability.
Clinical Torque Protocol for MUAs
- MUA to implant: 15 Ncm at surgery; retorque to 15 Ncm after 10–14 days soft-tissue healing
- Prosthetic screw to MUA (provisional): 10 Ncm — allows controlled retrievability
- Prosthetic screw to MUA (definitive): 15 Ncm — after osseointegration confirmed
Prosthetic Workflow: From Day Zero to Definitive Delivery
Phase 1 — Immediate Provisional (Day 0–7)
The immediate provisional bridge is either fabricated from a pre-manufactured surgical conversion base or from a digitally pre-planned milled PMMA blank designed before surgery using cone-beam CT data (coDiagnostiX, Blue Sky Plan, or similar software). The pre-planned digital workflow reduces chairside time on surgery day and produces a more accurately fitting provisional than a purely chairside-converted denture approach.
Phase 2 — Osseointegration Period (Months 1–4)
During this phase the provisional bridge remains in function while the implants osseointegrate. Recall appointments at 4–6 week intervals allow monitoring of tissue health, screw torque stability, and occlusal integrity. Patients follow a soft diet for the first 6 weeks and maintain the prosthesis with a water flosser, interdental brushes, and chlorhexidine rinse for the first 2 weeks post-surgery.
Phase 3 — Final Records (Month 4–5)
Once osseointegration is confirmed — ideally with resonance frequency analysis (ISQ ≥65) or at minimum with confirmed clinical immobility and favorable peri-implant radiographic presentation — final impressions are taken using open-tray multi-unit impression copings. A face-bow transfer, verified centric relation record, and phonetic/esthetic assessment complete the data set for definitive prosthesis fabrication.
Phase 4 — Definitive Prosthesis Delivery (Month 5–6)
The definitive All-on-4 prosthesis is most commonly fabricated as a monolithic or veneered zirconia structure supported by a milled titanium bar, or as a full-arch CAD/CAM milled titanium-acrylic hybrid bridge. Zirconia offers superior wear resistance and esthetics; the hybrid bridge allows easier chairside repair of individual acrylic teeth if fracture occurs. Passive framework fit is verified with a Sheffield test (single-screw test) at try-in before final delivery.
Key clinical reminder: passive fit must be verified at every prosthetic stage. A gap of as little as 50 µm at the implant-abutment interface under a loaded full-arch framework generates sufficient micro-movement to compromise osseointegration and accelerate marginal bone loss over time.
Clinical Tips for Consistent Outcomes
- Pre-surgical CBCT is mandatory — never plan posterior tilt without 3D volumetric confirmation of anatomy and bone density class.
- Use surgical guides or templates to replicate the planned implant positions intraoperatively, especially the posterior angulation targets.
- Stage extractions when possible — extracting and grafting residual sockets 8–12 weeks before implant surgery allows initial bone fill without delaying the overall treatment timeline excessively.
- Plan for contingencies — have a fifth (contingency) implant position identified pre-surgically in case a posterior implant fails to achieve 35 Ncm. In the maxilla, a pterygoid or nasal spine implant can rescue the immediate loading protocol.
- Establish a disciplined occlusal scheme — mutually protected occlusion or lingualized occlusion with bilateral balanced contacts reduces the lateral force components that are most damaging to tilted implants under immediate load.
- Document ISQ values at placement and at the definitive impression appointment to objectively track osseointegration progression and identify outliers early.