Evaluation of die trim morphology made by CAD-CAM technology.

J Prosthet Dent

Professor and Assistant Program Director, Postgraduate Program in Prosthodontics, Marquette University School of Dentistry, Milwaukee, Wis.

Published: September 2017

AI Article Synopsis

Article Abstract

Statement Of Problem: The die contour can affect the emergence profile of prosthetic restorations. However, little information is available regarding the congruency between a stereolithographic (SLA) die and its corresponding natural tooth.

Purpose: The purpose of this vitro study was to evaluate the shapes of SLA die in comparison with the subgingival contour of a prepared tooth to be restored with a ceramic crown.

Material And Methods: Twenty extracted human teeth, 10 incisors, and 10 molars, were disinfected and mounted in a typodont model. The teeth were prepared for a ceramic restoration. Definitive impressions were made using an intraoral scanner from which 20 SLA casts with removable dies were fabricated. The removable dies and corresponding human teeth were digitized using a 3-dimensional desktop scanner and evaluated with computer-aided design software. The subgingival morphology with regard to angle, length, and volume at the buccolingual and mesiodistal surfaces and at zones A, B, C, and D were compared. Data were first analyzed with repeated measures analysis of variance (ANOVA), using locations (buccolingual and mesiodistal), zones (A, B, C, and D), and model type (SLA and Natural) as within-subject factors and tooth type (molar and incisor) as the between-subject factor. Post hoc analyses were performed to investigate the difference between natural teeth and corresponding SLA models, depending upon the interaction effect from the repeated measures ANOVA (α=.05).

Results: For angle analysis, the incisor group demonstrated a significant difference between the natural tooth and SLA die on the buccolingual surfaces (P<.05), whereas the molar group demonstrated a significant difference at the mesiodistal surfaces (P<.05). For the evaluation of length and volume, the incisor group showed significant differences in zone D on both the buccolingual (P<.05) and the mesiodistal (P<.05) surfaces. However, significant differences in zones C (P<.05) and D (P<.05) on the buccolingual surfaces and in all zones on the mesiodistal surfaces were observed in the molar group.

Conclusions: For the comparison of angles, SLA dies did not replicate the subgingival contour of natural teeth on the buccolingual surfaces of the incisal groups. For the comparison of length and volume, SLA dies were more concave and did not replicate the subgingival contour of natural teeth in the incisal and molar groups.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.prosdent.2016.10.027DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

sla die
12
human teeth
8
removable dies
8
buccolingual mesiodistal
8
repeated measures
8
difference natural
8
sla
6
evaluation die
4
die trim
4
trim morphology
4

Similar Publications

Purpose: To compare the marginal and internal gap, surface roughness, fracture resistance and mode of failure of provisional crowns fabricated with 3D printing and CAD/CAM manufacturing techniques. Methods and Materials: A maxillary first premolar was prepared for an all-ceramic crown and reproduced in cobalt-chromium metal dies (n=30) following CAD/CAM technology. The die was digitally scanned and exocad software was used to design the missing crown, which was manufactured using a CAM milling machine and two types of 3D printing machines (SLA and DLP) to produce 10 provisional crowns per group.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The comparison of the accuracy of temporary crowns fabricated with several 3D printers and a milling machine.

J Adv Prosthodont

April 2023

Dental Research Institute and Department of Dental Biomaterials Science, School of Dentistry, Seoul National University, Seoul, Republic of Korea.

Purpose: The purpose of this study was to compare the accuracy of various 3D printers and a milling machine.

Materials And Methods: The die model was designed using CAD (Autodesk Inventor 2018 sp3). The 30 µm cement space was given to the die and the ideal crown of the mandibular left first molar was designed using CAD (ExoCAD).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: To evaluate the effects of 5 manufacturing technologies and 2 finish line designs on the trueness and dimensional stability of 3D-printed definitive dies at finish line regions under different storage conditions and time.

Material And Methods: Preparation of light chamfer and round shoulder finish lines were adopted individually on two mandibular first molar typodont teeth and digitalized as standard tessellation language (STL) files. A total of 240 samples (192 AM definitive dies and 48 definitive conventional stone dies) in 20 groups (n = 12) were manufactured based on 2 finishing line designs (chamfer and shoulder), 5 manufacturing technologies (4 additively manufactured technologies and conventional stone die), and 2 storage conditions (light exposure and dark).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The additive manufacturing of BaTiO (BT) ceramics through stereolithography (SLA) 3D printing at 465 nm wavelength was demonstrated. After different milling times, different paste compositions with varied initial micron-sized powders were studied to find a composition suitable for 3D printing. The pastes were evaluated in terms of photopolymerization depth depending on the laser scanning speed.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Statement Of Problem: Digital systems have been developed as substitutes for the traditional fabrication of wax patterns and definitive restorations, but the accuracy of these systems is unclear.

Purpose: The purpose of this in vitro study was to evaluate and compare the marginal fit of metal copings fabricated from milling, stereolithography (SLA), and 3D wax printer (PolyJet) patterns.

Material And Methods: A standard machined brass die model was designed and prepared.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

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!