| Literature DB >> 27621708 |
Aikaterini Tsaira1, Panagiotis Karagiannidis2, Margarita Sidira1, Spyros Kassavetis3, Dimitris Kugiumtzis4, Stergios Logothetidis3, Olga Naka1, Argirios Pissiotis1, Konstantinos Michalakis5.
Abstract
Removable complete and partial dentures are supported by the residual alveolar ridges consisting of mucosa, submucosa, periosteum, and bone. An understanding of the biomechanical behavior of the oral mucosa is essential in order to improve the denture-bearing foundations for complete and partially edentulous patients. The purpose of this paper was to examine the biomechanical behavior of the soft tissues supporting a removable denture and develop a model for that reason. Keratinized oral mucosa blocks with their underlying bone were harvested from the maxillary palatal area adjacent to the edentulous ridges of a cadaver. The compressive response of the oral mucosa was tested by using atomic force microscopy. The specimens were first scanned in order their topography to be obtained. The mechanical properties of the specimens were tested using a single crystal silicon pyramidal tip, which traversed toward the keratinized oral mucosa specimens. Loading-unloading cycles were registered and four mathematical models were tested using MATLAB to note which one approximates the force-displacement curve as close as possible: a. spherical, b. conical, c. third order polynomial, d. Murphy (fourth order polynomial, non-linear Hertzian based). The third order polynomial model showed the best accuracy in representing the force-displacement data of the tested specimens. A model was developed in order to analyze the biomechanical behavior of the human oral keratinized mucosa and obtain information about its mechanical properties.Entities:
Keywords: atomic force microscopy; contact mechanics; curve fitting; human oral keratinized mucosa; mathematical model; oral tissue mechanics; polynomial model
Year: 2016 PMID: 27621708 PMCID: PMC5002422 DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2016.00364
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Physiol ISSN: 1664-042X Impact factor: 4.566
Figure 1Human keratinized oral mucosa specimen with the underlying bone, tested with AFM.
Figure 2The tapping mode selected for the purposes of this study.
Figure 3Three-dimensional AFM image of keratinized oral mucosa.
Figure 4Indentation of the human keratinized oral mucosa by the Si.
Figure 5Load-unload curve.
Comparison of the numerical fit results including the goodness-of-fit statistic of the normalized mean square error, where the normalization is by the sample variance.
| exp = 3/2 | 0.126403 | 0.009939 | 0.021102 | 0.003426 | 0.004355 |
| exp = 2 | 0.047443 | 0.085310 | 0.117485 | 0.060889 | 0.066963 |
| Murphy | 0.000380 | 0.002366 | 0.004634 | 0.002658 | 0.01629 |
| Polynomial 3 | 0.000396 | 0.000071 | 0.000142 | 0.000189 | 0.000023 |
Figure 6Oral mucosa force-displacement curve (loading) with different models fitting.