AI Article Synopsis

  • - Clinical use of PMMA resin for provisional FPDs often leads to fractures due to inadequate mechanical strength, especially in long-span connectors; this study aims to assess the fracture load related to different pontic span lengths.
  • - Fifty-six provisional FPDs were tested, with some reinforced by glass fibers, revealing that those with a 14 mm span had the highest fracture load, and fiber reinforcement significantly improved strength and fracture patterns compared to unreinforced samples.
  • - The study concluded that acrylic FPDs exhibit higher fracture resistance at spans up to 17 mm, and incorporating glass fibers can enhance durability and alter fracture patterns from catastrophic to less severe types.

Article Abstract

Background/purpose: Clinically, PMMA resin is extensively used for fabricating provisional FPDs. However, fracture often occurs due to the unsatisfactory mechanical strength, especially within connectors of long-span provisional FPDs. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the fracture load of fiber-reinforced provisional FPDs with various pontic span lengths, and to identify the most suitable span length for fiber-reinforced long-span provisional FPDs.

Materials And Methods: Fifty-six provisional FPDs with various pontic span lengths were fabricated. Seven samples from each group were reinforced with glass fibers. Unreinforced counterparts served as control. The samples were fixed on the abutments after thermocycling and then received a fatigue test. Subsequently, they were mechanically loaded until fracture, and the initial fracture load and fracture patterns were recorded. Statistical analysis, including two-sample t-test, one-way, two-way ANOVA, Tukey-Kramer HSD post hoc analysis and χ2 test were used to evaluate mechanical performance.

Results: The mean fracture load of FPDs with 14 mm pontic span length is significantly higher than the other lengths. The fracture load of each reinforced group is significantly higher than each counterpart control. There is no interaction between two variables, pontic span and fiber reinforcement. With fiber reinforcement, the fracture patterns were altered from catastrophic fracture to bent or partial fracture. But, the fracture patterns were not affected by pontic span.

Conclusion: The fracture load of acrylic FPDs decreases significantly when pontic span length is greater than 17 mm. Adding glass fibers into long-span provisional FPDs can significantly improve the fracture resistance and fracture patterns.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6739267PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jds.2018.11.008DOI Listing

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