Mesial-occlusal-distal (MOD) cavity preparations are commonly used to restore damaged teeth. While numerous in vitro cavity designs have been devised and tested, no analytical frameworks for assessing their resistance to fracture seem to exist. This concern is addressed here by resorting to a 2D slice specimen cut from restored molar teeth with rectangular-base MOD cavity. The evolution of damage due to axial cylindrical indentation is followed in situ. The failure begins with a rapid debonding along the tooth/filler interface and continues with unstable cracking from the cavity corner. The debonding load q is fairly fixed while the failure load q is insensitive to the presence of filler, increasing with cavity wall thickness h and reducing with cavity depth D. The growth of the corner crack is studied using a 2D fracture analysis in conjunction with the FEM technique. The ratio h = h/D emerges as a viable system parameter. A simple expression for q given in terms of h and dentin toughness K is developed that predicts well the test data. In vitro studies on full-fledged molar teeth with MOD cavity preparation show that the fracture resistance of filled cavities often exceeds by a large margin that of unfilled ones. Indications are that this may reflect load sharing with the filler. Thus, the fracture resistance of the unfilled cavity provides a lower bound to a compromised MOD filling after long-term aging in the mouth. This bound is well predicted by the slice model. Finally, it is recommended that MOD cavities be prepared, if applicable, such that h > D regardless of the tooth size.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jmbbm.2023.105747 | DOI Listing |
J Esthet Restor Dent
January 2025
Department of Restorative Dentistry, Faculty of Dentistry, Kırıkkale University, Kırıkkale, Türkiye.
Objective: This in vitro study aims to evaluate the effect of placing polyethylene fibers used in large Class II MOD (mesio-occlusion-distal) cavities into different flowable resin composites and in different positions on the fracture resistance of the restoration.
Materials And Methods: Ninety healthy human molars were used in the study. No treatment was performed on 10 of these teeth and they were used as the control group.
Optical clocks require an ultra-stable laser to probe and precisely measure the frequency of the narrow-linewidth clock transition. We introduce a portable ultraviolet (UV) laser system for use in an aluminum quantum logic clock, demonstrating a fractional frequency instability of approximately mod = 2 × 10. The system is based on an ultra-stable cavity with crystalline AlGaAs/GaAs mirror coatings, with a frequency quadrupling system employing two single-pass second-harmonic generation (SHG) stages.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Conserv Dent Endod
November 2024
Department of Conservative Dentistry and Endodontics, Priyadarshini Dental College and Hospital, Pandur, Tamil Nadu, India.
Objective: The objective of this study was to evaluate and compare the fracture resistance of MOD inlay preparations restored with two different lithium disilicate glass ceramics.
Materials And Methods: Standardized MOD inlay cavities were prepared on 64 human permanent premolar teeth and divided into two groups to be restored with lithium disilicate glass-ceramic materials, i.e.
J Conserv Dent Endod
November 2024
Department of Prosthodontics, D. Y. Patil Dental School, Lohegaon, Pune, Maharashtra, India.
Aim: To evaluate the effect of applying a matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) inhibitor on the fracture resistance of root-filled teeth restored with Everstick fiber-reinforced composite resin.
Subjects And Methods: After the selection of 60 freshly extracted human mandibular first molar, root canal access and standard uniformly sized mesio-occluso-distal (MOD) cavities were made and the teeth were randomly assigned into three groups ( = 20 each): Group I, the MOD cavity was first lined with flowable composite resin and then restored with composite resin. In Group II, Everstick fiber was placed into the bed of flowable composite in buccal-pulpal-lingual direction before the composite restoration was placed.
BMC Oral Health
December 2024
Department of Conservative Dentistry, Faculty of Dentistry, Minia University, Minia, Egypt.
Objectives: To compare the mechanical performance of partially replaced (repaired) intra-coronal restorations to totally replaced ones in root canal-treated teeth.
Methods: Thirty maxillary second premolars were selected according to strict criteria, mounted on moulds, and had mesio-occluso-distal (MOD) cavities prepared. Resin composite restorative material was used to perform the initial restoration, followed by aging procedures using thermo-mechanical cycling fatigue to replicate six months of intraoral aging.
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