Comparison of interim restorations fabricated by CAD/CAM with those fabricated manually.

J Prosthet Dent

Associate Professor, Department of Prosthodontics, Faculty of Odontology, Malmö University, Malmö, Sweden. Electronic address:

Published: September 2015

Statement Of Problem: Interim restorations represent an essential treatment step; however, the optimal resin material for long-term interim restorations requires investigation.

Purpose: The purpose of this in vitro study was to compare the color stability, water sorption, wear resistance, surface hardness, fracture resistance, and microleakage of computer-aided design/computer-aided manufacturing-(CAD/CAM) fabricated interim restorations with those of manually fabricated interim restorations.

Material And Methods: Epoxy replicas were made from a prepared maxillary first premolar. On the replicas, interim crowns were fabricated and divided into the following groups: CAD/CAM poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) blocks (CC), autopolymerizing temporary resin (AP), automix temporary resin (AM), and thermoplastic resin (TP). After cementation, all specimens were subjected to thermocycling and dynamic fatigue. The CIE Laboratory color coordinates were then recorded before and after immersion in coffee, tea, carbonated cola, and red wine. Water sorption was evaluated by using an immersion technique. Wear resistance was measured in a surface abrasion device. Vickers microhardness was measured on polished specimens. Fracture resistance was evaluated by axial loading with a universal testing machine. Marginal dye penetration was evaluated by sectioning the interim restorations after immersion in methylene blue (α=.05).

Results: Colorimetric analysis revealed a large degree of color alteration (ΔE) in the manually fabricated interim restorations: AP = ΔE of 6.7 ±2); AM = ΔE of 7.1 ±1.5), and TP = ΔE of =5.4 ±3.1. The CC group demonstrated color stability (ΔE=2.1 ±0.2). CAD/CAM interim restorations demonstrated significantly lower water sorption, higher wear resistance, higher surface hardness, and significantly higher fracture resistance (1289±56N) compared with manually fabricated interim restorations (AP=996 ±45, AM=899 ±37, and TP=1179 ±41). The stereomicroscopic examination of sectioned specimens demonstrated the absence of dye penetration in all tested specimens.

Conclusions: CAD/CAM interim crowns presented stable physical and mechanical properties and may be used for long-term interim restorations.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.prosdent.2015.03.007DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

interim restorations
36
fabricated interim
16
water sorption
12
wear resistance
12
fracture resistance
12
manually fabricated
12
interim
11
restorations
9
long-term interim
8
color stability
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!