| Literature DB >> 32741366 |
Ioannis Papathanasiou1, Phophi Kamposiora2, George Papavasiliou1, Marco Ferrari3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Advanced computer-aided design and computer-aided manufacturing (CAD-CAM) technology led to the introduction of an increasing number of machinable materials suitable for dental prostheses. One of these materials is polyetheretherketone (PEEK), a high performance polymer recently used in dentistry with favorable physical, mechanical and chemical properties. The purpose of this study was to review the current published literature on the use of PEEK for the fabrication of dental prostheses with CAD-CAM techniques.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical applications; Computer-assisted-design/ computer-assisted-manufacturing; Dental prostheses; Digital prosthodontics; Polyetheretherketone
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32741366 PMCID: PMC7398079 DOI: 10.1186/s12903-020-01202-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Oral Health ISSN: 1472-6831 Impact factor: 2.757
In vitro studies included in the review
| Study (year) | Application | Materials tested | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stawarczyk et al. (2015) [ | FDPs | CAD-CAM milled PEEK Pressed pellet PEEK Pressed granular PEEK ( | Higher mean fracture load (2.354 N) for milled FPDs than those pressed from granular PEEK (1.738 N) |
| Stawarczyk et al. (2013) [ | CAD-CAM PEEK ( | Μean fracture load of 1383 N Plastic deformation starting approximately at 1200 N | |
| Niem et al.(2019) [ | CAD-CAM PEEK Zirconia Lithium disilicate glass-ceramic ( | PEEK exhibited higher modulus of resilience than lithium disilicate Comparable to that of gold alloy | |
| Niem et al. (2019) [ | CAD-CAM PEEK Ceramic Composite and Polymer-based materials (n = 10 /group) | Flexural strength and modulus of elasticity of PEEK not significantly influenced by thermocycling | |
| Liebermann et al. (2016) [ | PEEK Hybrid material Composite resins PMMA-based materials ( | PEEK demonstrated: The lowest solubility and water absorption Similar hardness parameters to PMMA-based materials | |
| Taufall et al. (2016) [ | CAD-CAM PEEK veneered with different methods (digital veneering, conventional veneering with crea.lign, conventional with crea.lign paste, and pre-manufactured veneers) ( | The digital veneering showed the highest fracture load resistance | |
| Cekic-Nagas et al. (2018) [ | CAD-CAM PEEK PMMA Composite resin and fiber-reinforced composite materials ( | Highest load bearing capacity for PEEK | |
| Wimmer et al. (2016) [ | CAD-CAM PEEK Nanohybrid composite PMMA-based material ( | Significantly higher wear resistance for PEEK | |
| Wachtel et al. (2019) [ | IFDPs | CAD-CAM PEEK screw-retained crowns on titanium implants (n = 10) | Favorable fracture mode for PEEK compared to conventional materials Coronal displacement of bending points No screw loosening or veneer fracture |
| Sirandoni et al. (2019) [ | CAD-CAM PEEK PMMA Zzirconia Co-Cr Ti | Highest deformation for PEEK and PMMA frameworks that decreased von Mises stresses in the frameworks, implants and abutments PEEK exhibited critical tensile stress values in the trabecular bone | |
| Nazari et al. (2016) [ | CAD-CAM PEEK Zirconia Nickel-chromium alloy (n = 10/group) 3-unit IFDPs on two implants | Failure loads: Zirconia 2086 ± 362 N nickel-chromium alloy 5591 ± 1200 N PEEK 1430 ± 262 N | |
| Elsayed et al. (2019) [ | CAD-CAM PEEK Zirconia Lithium disilicate crowns supported by titanium and zirconia implant abutments ( | High fracture resistance of PEEK crowns, comparable to zirconia and lithium disilicate | |
| Jin et al. (2019) [ | CAD-CAM PEEK and titanium frameworks veneered with composite resin | PEEK exhibited Higher shear bond strength than Ti, good marginal fit and fracture resistance (1518 N) | |
| Preis et al. (2017) [ | CAD-CAM PEEK Zirconia-reinforced lithium silicate ceramics Composite resins Zirconia (n = 8/group) | PEEK molar implant-supported crowns showed lower fracture resistance than zirconia crowns Total failure rate of PEEK screw-retained frameworks veneered with composite paste | |
| Yilmaz et al. (2018) [ | Seven different CAD-CAM HPPs 100% PEEK 80% PEEK with 20% filler 80% PEKK with 20% filler Ceramic reinforced PEEK Interlaced fiberglass and resin Fiber-composite material New generation cubic zirconia 3Y-TZP Zirconia | Higher fracture resistance for zirconia implant-supported frameworks with cantilevers than PEEK-based materials | |
| Ghodsi et al. (2018) [ | CAD-CAM PEEK Zirconia Composite (n = 12/group) | No clinically acceptable marginal gaps for PEEK No significant differences observed in retention forces | |
| Zeighami et al. (2019) [ | CAD-CAM PEEK Zirconia, Composite (n = 12/group) | Better marginal adaptation for zirconia than PEEK | |
| Chen et al. (2019) [ | RPDs | CAD-CAM PEEK Co-Cr Ti alloys | PEEK caused lower stresses on periodontal ligament and higher stresses on the mucosa |
| Tribst et al. (2020) [ | PEEK Polyamide Polyoxymethylene Gold alloy Titanium CoCr | Polyoxymethylene and PEEK exhibited the lowest retentive forces | |
| Peng et al. (2019) [ | PEEK CoCr alloy | No significant difference in the long-term deformation | |
| Muhsin et al. (2018) [ | CAD-CAM PEEK granular PEEK Co-Cr casting alloy (n = 10/group) | Higher retentive force for milled PEEK clasps than thermopressed clasps Higher retentive forces for PEEK clasps at deeper undercuts with a thicker clasp design than Co-Cr clasps after 3 years of fatigue simulation | |
| Negm et al. (2019) [ | CAD-CAM Milled PEEK Thermo-pressed PEEK (n = 10/group) | Higher fit and trueness for directly milled frameworks | |
| Arnold et al. (2018) [ | CAD-CAM Milled PEEK Cast metal frameworks with different techniques (n = 12/group) | PEEK RPD frameworks have better precision and fit than metal frameworks fabricated using different techniques | |
| Hada et al. (2020) [ | Complete denture framework | PEEK Fiber-reinforced composite Nano-zirconia cobalt-chromium-molybdenum alloy ( | PEEK provides lower reinforcement than the other materials |
| Emera et al. (2019) [ | Double-crown-retained Removable Dental Prostheses | Zirconia or PEEK primary crowns Zirconia or PEEK secondary crowns | Telescopic attachments fabricated from zirconia primary crowns and PEEK secondary crowns exhibited the lowest stresses transmitted to the implants |
| Schubert et al. (2019) [ | Implant-supported zirconia primary crowns with electroformed secondary crowns or CAD-CAM PEEK secondary crowns (n = 10/group) | Stable retentive force values over 10 years of simulated aging for PEEK secondary crowns | |
| Merk et al. (2016) [ | Zirconia primary crowns Secondary PEEK crowns of different taper and manufacturing methods; milled from PEEK blanks; thermo-pressed from PEEK pellets; thermo-pressed from granular PEEK (n = 10/group) | Fabrication method and taper angle had no consistent effect on retentive forces within different groups | |
| Stock et al. (2016) [ | Zirconia primary crowns Secondary PEEK crowns of different taper and manufacturing methods; milled from PEEK blanks; thermo-pressed from PEEK pellets; thermo-pressed from granular PEEK (n = 30/group) | Milled 0° tapered PEEK crowns presented the lowest retention force Milled 2° tapered PEEK crowns had the highest retention force values Retention force of pressed PEEK not influenced by the taper angle Decrease of retention after the first twenty pull-off cyclew for pressed PEEK | |
| Wagner et al. (2018) [ | PEEK telescopic crowns and cobalt chrome copings of different taper and manufacturing methods (n = 10/group) | Stable retention load values for each test group | |
| Stock et al. (2016) [ | Milled PEEK primary and cobalt-chromium (CoCr), zirconia (ZrO2) and galvanic (GAL) secondary crowns with three different tapers (n = 30, 10/taper) | Milled PEEK can be used as primary crown material with high retentive forces in combination with secondary zirconia, cobalt-chromium or electroformed crowns | |
| Benli et al. (2020) [ | Occlusal splint | CAD-CAM PEEK Vinyl acetate Polymethyl methacrylate Polycarbonate Polyethyleneterephthalate (n = 12/group) | After chewing simulation PEEK occlusal splints exhibited lower loss of volume and lower roughness alteration compared to other CAD-CAM materials |
| Benli et al. (2020) [ | Intra-radicular posts | Milled PEEK Glass-fiber Cast-metal (n = 20/group) | PEEK posts exhibited the highest tensile bond strength and the lowest surface roughness |
| Kaleli et al. (2018) [ | Implant abutments | PEEK and zirconia customized abutments | Finite element analysis showed higher stress values in restorative crowns for PEEK abutments |
| Abdullah et al. (2016) [ | Provisional crowns | PEEK VITA CAD Temp Telio CAD-Temp Protemp 4 | PEEK demonstrated superior fit and fracture strength than other materials |
Clinical studies included in the review
| Study (Year) | Study design | Intervention | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Parmigiani-Izquierdo et al. (2017) [ | Case report | Zirconia implants restored with milled PEEK frameworks veneered with composite resin for the replacement of upper molars | Cushioning of occlusal loads while chewing Viable solution for patients with intolerance to metal alloys |
| Cabello-Dominguez et al. (2019) [ | Case report | Monolithic zirconia fixed prosthesis in the maxilla and PEEK framework with gingival composite resin combined with lithium disilicate crowns in the mandible for the rehabilitation of a completely edentulous patient | The reduced weight and modulus of elasticity of PEEK could reduce the risk of mechanical complications Higher cost than metal-ceramic or metal-acrylic restoration |
| Zoidis (2018) [ | Case report | PEEK implant framework material in combination with prefabricated PMMA veneers for the fabrication of a complete maxillary arch implant-supported fixed restoration | Esthetic outcome comparable with that of ceramic restoration After 2 years, no sign of screw loosening, veneering material chipping, wear, or staining |
| Harb et al. (2019) [ | Case report | Milled PEEK framework combined with acrylic resin denture teeth and heat-cured acrylic resin denture for Kennedy Class I RPD fabrication | Adequate fit and good patient satisfaction in terms of function and esthetics |
| Costa-Palau et al. (2014) [ | Case report | Milled PEEK framework for the fabrication of a maxillary obturator prosthesis | Compared to conventional obturators PEEK frameworks permit the fabrication of lighter prostheses with improved retention, function and esthetics |
| Mangano et al. (2019) [ | Clinical study | Combining Intraoral and Face Scans for the Design and Fabrication of CAD-CAM PEEK Implant-Supported Bars for Maxillary Overdentures (15 patients) | After a year in function 100% implant survival 80% success rate |
| Spies et al. (2018) [ | Case report | Implant-supported overdenture with the receptor part of the bar milled from PEEK polymerized into a zirconia framework for the rehabitation of an edentulous patient | High patient satisfaction with function and esthetics after 6 months |
| Hahnel et al. (2018) [ | Case report | Primary CoCr copings and secondary CAD-CAM PEEK framework veneered with composite resin for the fabrication of double-crown-retained interim removable dental prosthesis | Biocompatibilityand low weight no complications after 3 months |
| Siewert (2018) [ | Case report | Primary zirconia copings and secondary PEEK framework veneered with monolithic zirconia for the rehabilitation of an edentulous patient with intolerance to titanium | High chewing comfort Dampening of chewing forces |
| Beretta et al. (2019) [ | Randomized clinical trial | Comparison of CAD-CAM fabricated customized healing abutments and standard healing caps placed at the surgical stage for the creation of the desired emergence profile (n = 10/group) | After a healing period of 1–3 months Patients with PEEK customized healing abutments showed higher functional implant prosthodontics score (FIPS) and lower numerical rating scale (NRS) values |