| Literature DB >> 25557585 |
Florian Beuer1, Julian Groesser1, Josef Schweiger1, Jeremias Hey2, Jan-Frederik Güth2, Michael Stimmelmayr1.
Abstract
The digital fabrication of dental restorations on implants has become a standard procedure during the last decade. Avoiding changing abutments during prosthetic treatment has been shown to be superior to the traditional protocol. The presented concept for implant-supported single crowns describes a digital approach without a physical model from implant placement to final delivery in two appointments. A 54-year-old man was provided with a single-tooth implant on his left mandibular first molar. Before wound closure, the implant position was captured digitally with an intraoral scanning device. After bone healing at the time of second-stage surgery the final screw-retained crown fabricated without a physical model was inserted. Soft tissue healing took place at the definitive restoration, avoiding abutment changes or changes of the healing cap. These led to stable soft tissues with a minimum of surgery. The benefits of digital fabrication and the unique way to scan the implant right after placement give an additional value that would not be achieved by analog techniques. In addition to financial benefits it represents a biologically advantageous, one-abutment/one-time approach with customized screw-retained, full-contour crowns or cemented crowns on custom abutments.Entities:
Keywords: Dental implant; computer aided impressions; digital dentistry; implant prosthodontics; one-abutment one-time; single-tooth implant
Year: 2015 PMID: 25557585 DOI: 10.1111/jopr.12256
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Prosthodont ISSN: 1059-941X Impact factor: 2.752