The authors analyzed the numerous devices and prosthetic kits currently available for implant prosthodontics. Existing systems can be classified into two fundamentally different categories: the gold ring cylinder (or its equivalent in resin for casting) and the prosthetic abutment core or post concept. The former is based on connection of two nearly flat, horizontal surfaces by means of a screw, which avoids problems of parallelism; the latter can be likened to insertion of one part into another, like a crown that slides along the vertical axis of an abutment, with connection being obtained by cementation and/or screwing. Prosthetic abutment core or post: Whether monoblock or multiblock, the implant core or post is very similar to a conventional metallic abutment. Construction of the implant prosthesis is generally no problem when parallelism has been respected during surgery; if problems are encountered with parallelism, options include: 1. Adjustment of the abutment core by grinding, 2. Use of a telescope to achieve parallelism, 3. Use of a bendable prosthetic abutment core, 4. Use of a prosthetic abutment core preangulated 10 degrees-20 degrees, 5. A combination of the above solutions. The implant prostheses may be screwed, cemented or clipped in position. Gold ring cylinder concept The gold ring cylinder (or its equivalent in resin for casting) theoretically eliminates problems of parallelism, but at the same time restricts the implant prosthesis to screw techniques. A special protocol is required for the impression and construction of the prosthesis. Impression with plaster is often the best method for total edentulism whereas "open" impression trays are advisable for partial prostheses. In the laboratory, use of a machined gold ring cylinder provides optimum precision, but intra-oral verification remains necessary. Implant prosthodontics unquestionably represent a new type of "know how": both the dentist and the dental lab technician must acquire the necessary training and adapt their work routines.
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BMC Oral Health
January 2025
Department of Agr. Machinery and Technology Engineering, Akdeniz University, Antalya, Turkey.
Background: Examining stress distributions in abutment teeth with periapical lesions is essential for understanding their biomechanical impact on dental structures and tissues. This study uses finite element analysis (FEA) to evaluate these stress patterns under occlusal forces, aiming to enhance treatment strategies and prosthetic designs.
Methods: Three FEA models were created: a healthy mandibular premolar (Model 1), a premolar with a single crown and a lesion repaired using a fiber-post (Model 2), and 3) a premolar with a lesion repaired using fiber-post to support a four-member bridge (Model 3).
Heliyon
January 2025
Department of Mining Engineering, College of Engineering, Addis Ababa Science and Technology University, Addis Ababa, P.O. Box: 16417, Ethiopia.
Developing nations like Ethiopia face food and water shortages due to weather and droughts. The Bowa Dayole masonry gravity dam is expected to irrigate farmland downstream. Despite this, the engineering geology is complicated by the presence of highly fractured and weathered aphanitic basaltic rock, along with a weak unwelded to welded tuff rock mass in the dam foundation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDent Mater
December 2024
Mechatronics Engineering Department, Erciyes University Faculty of Engineering, Ahmet El Biruni Cad. Köşk Mah, Melikgazi, Kayseri, Turkey.
Objective: The purpose was to compare the biomechanical behavior of single-piece post-core restorations made from polyaryletherketone materials with fiber post-core restorations when serving as abutments for RPD using finite element analysis (FEA).
Methods: Phantom maxillary central incisor and mandibular second premolar were trimmed 1-mm coronally to cemento-enamel junction; root canals were enlarged and the teeth were scanned. Data was transferred to a solid modeling software.
J Prosthodont
October 2024
Department of Reconstructive Dentistry and Gerodontology, School of Dental Medicine, University of Bern, Bern, Switzerland.
Purpose: To evaluate how build orientation affects the fabrication trueness of additively manufactured implant-supported complete arch prostheses by comparing them to subtractively manufactured high-impact polymer-based prostheses.
Materials And Methods: An edentulous maxillary model with four implants at canine and first molar regions bilaterally was digitized (ATOS Core 80 5MP) to design a reference implant-supported complete arch prosthesis standard tessellation language file (RF-STL). The STL file was used to manufacture prostheses additively in five different orientations according to the build platform (AM-0, 0-degree; AM-15, 15-degree; AM-30, 30-degree; AM-45, 45-degree; AM-90, 90-degree) or subtractively (SM-HIP, control) (n = 10).
Cureus
September 2024
Department of Periodontics, Vidarbha Youth Welfare Society Dental College and Hospital, Amravati, IND.
Implant-supported prostheses can lead to biological or mechanical failures. The loosening of the abutment screw and its fracture are the most common technical complications. Recovery of fractured parts is quite challenging due to the unavailability of a universal standard screw retrieval kit on the market.
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