| Literature DB >> 30597945 |
Gabriele Cervino1, Luca Fiorillo2, Alan Scott Herford3, Luigi Laino4, Giuseppe Troiano5, Giulia Amoroso6, Salvatore Crimi7, Marco Matarese8, Cesare D'Amico9, Enrico Nastro Siniscalchi10, Marco Cicciù11.
Abstract
Hydrocolloids were the first elastic materials to be used in the dental field. Elastic impression materials include reversible (agar-agar), irreversible (alginate) hydrocolloids and synthetic elastomers (polysulfides, polyethers, silicones). They reproduce an imprint faithfully, providing details of a high definition despite the presence of undercuts. With the removal of the impression, being particularly rich in water, the imprints can deform but later adapt to the original shape due to the elastic properties they possess. The advantages of using alginate include the low cost, a better tolerability on the part of the patient, the ease of manipulation, the short time needed for execution, the instrumentation and the very simple execution technique and possibility of detecting a detailed impression (even in the presence of undercuts) in a single step. A comprehensive review of the current literature was conducted according to the PRISMA guidelines by accessing the NCBI PubMed database. Authors conducted a search of articles in written in English published from 2008 to 2018. All the relevant studies were included in the search with respect to the characteristics and evolution of new marine derived materials. Much progress has been made in the search for new marine derived materials. Conventional impression materials are different, and especially with the advent of digital technology, they have been suffering from a decline in research attention over the last few years. However, this type of impression material, alginates (derived from marine algae), have the advantage of being among the most used in the dental medical field.Entities:
Keywords: alginates; impression materials; marine algae; marine derivates
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30597945 PMCID: PMC6356954 DOI: 10.3390/md17010018
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mar Drugs ISSN: 1660-3397 Impact factor: 5.118
Scheme 1Prisma Flow diagram.
Studies taken into consideration and field of interest.
| Reference | Authors | Title | Results | Years |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Spoto G. | Title of chapter. In | Alginates features | 2013 |
| [ | Spoto G. | Title of chapter. In | Alginates impression techniques | 2013 |
| [ | Cesur et al. | Evaluation of digital model accuracy and time-dependent deformation of alginate impressions. | Deformation and alginates storage | 2017 |
| [ | Garrofé et al. | Linear Dimensional Stability of Irreversible Hydrocolloid Materials Over Time. | Deformation and alginates storage | 2015 |
| [ | Guiraldo et al. | Influence of alginate impression materials and storage time on surface detail reproduction and dimensional accuracy of stone models. | Deformation alginates storage, | 2015 |
| [ | Rohanian et al. | Effect of storage time of extended-pour and conventional alginate impressions on dimensional accuracy of casts. | Deformation and alginates storage and alginates impression detail | 2014 |
| [ | Inoue et al. | Influences of differences intray design and impression material on impression pressure at edentulous mandible. | Alginates impression techniques | 2017 |
| [ | Hyde et al. | A randomised controlled trial of complete denture impression materials. | Alginates impression techniques | 2014 |
| [ | Marquezan et al. | Does the contact time of alginate with plaster cast influence its properties? | Alginates impression techniques and dental impression material costs | 2012 |
| [ | Farzin et al. | Effect of pouring time and storage temperature on dimensional stability of casts made from irreversible hydrocolloid. | Alginates impression detail and deformation | 2010 |
| [ | Fonseca et al. | Radiodensity evaluation of dental impression materials in comparison to tooth structures. | Alginates impression radiodensity | 2010 |
| [ | Iwasaki et al. | Effects of immersion disinfection of agar-alginate combined impressions on the surface properties of stone casts. | Alginates deformation and deterioration during disinfection | 2016 |
| [ | Hiraguchi et al. | Effect of immersion disinfection of alginate impressions in sodium hypochlorite solution on the dimensional changes of stone models. | Alginates deformation and deterioration during disinfection | 2012 |
| [ | Hiraguchi et al. | The influence of storing alginate impressions sprayed with disinfectant on dimensional accuracy and deformation of maxillary edentulous stone models. | Alginates deformation and deterioration during disinfection | 2010 |
| [ | Surna et al. | Alginates deformation and deterioration during disinfection | 2009 | |
| [ | Hulme et al. | Cost-effectiveness of silicone and alginate impressions for complete dentures. | Impression materials costs | 2014 |
Figure 1Alginate automixer Cavex®, for alginate mixing.
Figure 2Manual alginate impression material mixing, water and powder. Courtesy Prof M.C.
Figure 3Manual alginate impression material mixing. Alginate on dental impression tray. Courtesy Prof M.C.