Literature DB >> 26916603

Reliability and Failure Modes of a Hybrid Ceramic Abutment Prototype.

Nelson Rfa Silva1, Hellen S Teixeira2,3, Lucas M Silveira2, Estevam A Bonfante4, Paulo G Coelho2, Van P Thompson5.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: A ceramic and metal abutment prototype was fatigue tested to determine the probability of survival at various loads.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: Lithium disilicate CAD-milled abutments (n = 24) were cemented to titanium sleeve inserts and then screw attached to titanium fixtures. The assembly was then embedded at a 30° angle in polymethylmethacrylate. Each (n = 24) was restored with a resin-cemented machined lithium disilicate all-ceramic central incisor crown. Single load (lingual-incisal contact) to failure was determined for three specimens. Fatigue testing (n = 21) was conducted employing the step-stress method with lingual mouth motion loading. Failures were recorded, and reliability calculations were performed using proprietary software. Probability Weibull curves were calculated with 90% confidence bounds. Fracture modes were classified with a stereomicroscope, and representative samples imaged with scanning electron microscopy.
RESULTS: Fatigue results indicated that the limiting factor in the current design is the fatigue strength of the abutment screw, where screw fracture often leads to failure of the abutment metal sleeve and/or cracking in the implant fixture. Reliability for completion of a mission at 200 N load for 50K cycles was 0.38 (0.52% to 0.25 90% CI) and for 100K cycles was only 0.12 (0.26 to 0.05)-only 12% predicted to survive. These results are similar to those from previous studies on metal to metal abutment/fixture systems where screw failure is a limitation. No ceramic crown or ceramic abutment initiated fractures occurred, supporting the research hypothesis. The limiting factor in performance was the screw failure in the metal-to-metal connection between the prototyped abutment and the fixture, indicating that this configuration should function clinically with no abutment ceramic complications.
CONCLUSION: The combined ceramic with titanium sleeve abutment prototype performance was limited by the fatigue degradation of the abutment screw. In fatigue, no ceramic crown or ceramic abutment components failed, supporting the research hypothesis with a reliability similar to that of all-metal abutment fixture systems. A lithium disilcate abutment with a Ti alloy sleeve in combination with an all-ceramic crown should be expected to function clinically in a satisfactory manner.
© 2016 by the American College of Prosthodontists.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Abutment; ceramics; fatigue; lithium-disilicate

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2016        PMID: 26916603     DOI: 10.1111/jopr.12461

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Prosthodont        ISSN: 1059-941X            Impact factor:   2.752


  4 in total

1.  Fracture resistance of implant- supported monolithic crowns cemented to zirconia hybrid-abutments: zirconia-based crowns vs. lithium disilicate crowns.

Authors:  Shareen H Elshiyab; Noor Nawafleh; Andreas Öchsner; Roy George
Journal:  J Adv Prosthodont       Date:  2018-02-12       Impact factor: 1.904

2.  Hybrid-abutment-restoration: effect of material type on torque maintenance and fracture resistance after thermal aging.

Authors:  Walid Al-Zordk; Ahmed Elmisery; Mohamed Ghazy
Journal:  Int J Implant Dent       Date:  2020-06-24

3.  Tensile Bond Strength of Three Custom-made Tooth-Colored Implant Superstructures to Titanium Inserts.

Authors:  Mitra Zirak; Mahroo Vojdani; Amir Ali Reza Khaledi; Mitra Farzin
Journal:  J Dent (Shiraz)       Date:  2019-06

4.  Load-Bearing Capacity of Zirconia Crowns Screwed to Multi-Unit Abutments with and without a Titanium Base: An In Vitro Pilot Study.

Authors:  Hadas Heller; Adi Arieli; Ilan Beitlitum; Raphael Pilo; Shifra Levartovsky
Journal:  Materials (Basel)       Date:  2019-09-20       Impact factor: 3.623

  4 in total

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