| Literature DB >> 29790033 |
Pia Baumgart1, Holger Kirsten2,3, Rainer Haak4, Constanze Olms5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Implant and superstructure provide a complex system, which has to withstand oral conditions. Concerning the brittleness of many ceramics, fractures are a greatly feared issue. Therefore, polymer-infiltrated ceramic networks (PICNs) were developed. Because of its low Young's modulus and high elastic modulus, the PICN crown on a one-piece zirconia implant might absorb forces to prevent the system from fracturing in order to sustain oral forces. Recommendations for the material of superstructure on zirconia implants are lacking, and only one study investigates PICN crowns on these types of implants. Accordingly, this study aimed to examine PICN crowns on one-piece zirconia implants regarding bond strength and surface wear after long-term chewing simulation (CS).Entities:
Keywords: Hybrid ceramic; Implant; One-piece; PICN; Polymer-infiltrated ceramic network; Zirconia
Year: 2018 PMID: 29790033 PMCID: PMC5964049 DOI: 10.1186/s40729-018-0127-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Implant Dent ISSN: 2198-4034
Fig. 1Luted crown on embedded implant before chewing simulation
Micro-CT scanning parameters of the replicas before and after CS
| Voltage | 60 kV |
| Amperage | 167 μA |
| Filter | No filter |
| Angle step | 0.7° |
| Scanning resolution | Large pixel scan, 960 × 666 pixels |
| Rotation angle | 180 ° |
| Voxel size | 14.985 μm |
| Frame averaging | 20 |
| Random shift | 10 |
Fig. 2Four replicas on specimen stubs and foam pellets in the sample holder of the Micro-CT
Fig. 3Area of abrasion (yellow surface) and maximum vertical wear (arrow)
Mean (standard deviation) of assessed parameters
| CS round ( | Pull-out forces | Maximum wear | Volume wear |
|---|---|---|---|
| #1 (5) | 319.6 (75.4) | 0.33 (0.05) | 0.88 (0.31) |
| #2 (5) | 326.2 (75.0) | 0.30 (0.04) | 0.71 (0.20) |
| #3 (5) | 319.4 (43.9) | 0.32 (0.03) | 0.68 (0.18) |
| #4 (5) | 325.9 (69.8) | 0.31 (0.07)* | 0.69 (0.27)* |
*Only four specimens could be analyzed due to a mistake during grouting n number of samples per round
Stability of conditions across four CS rounds
| ANOVA results | Pull-out forces | Maximum wear | Volume wear |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0.02 (3, 16) | 0.39 (3, 15) | 0.77 (3, 15) | |
| 0.997 | 0.764 | 0.530 |
No statistically significant differences were observed between rounds (testing the null hypothesis that means are similar across all four rounds of CS). This supports stability and comparability of the experiments
Characteristics of polymer-infiltrated ceramic crowns on one-piece zirconia implants
| Characteristics | Total | Observations |
|---|---|---|
| With CS | ||
| System fractured | 20 | 0% (95% CI 0–16.8%) |
| Crowns loosened | 20 | 0% (95% CI 0–16.8%) |
| Maximum wear depth | 19 | 0.31 mm (0.04 mm) |
| Volume wear | 19 | 0.74 mm3 (0.23 mm3) |
| Bond strength (pull-out test) | 20 | 322.8 N (61.9 N)* |
| Without CS | ||
| Bond strength (pull-out test) | 5 | 588.4 N (57.7 N)* |
If not stated otherwise, means (standard deviations) of assessed parameters are shown
*p < 0.001 for comparing the effect of performing a CS (experimental group) vs. performing no CS (control group) on bond strength according to the null hypothesis of no difference between both groups
Fig. 4Luting agent located mostly in the crown (a) and only sparsely on the implant (b). A crown fragment is remaining on the implant
Fig. 5SEM images of the mesial margin of abrasion under topography contrast (a) and material contrast (b)