| Literature DB >> 35252451 |
Gan Huang1, Libo Wu2, Jie Hu1, Xiongming Zhou1, Fei He1, Li Wan1, Shu-Ting Pan1.
Abstract
In recent ten years, with the fast development of digital and engineering manufacturing technology, additive manufacturing has already been more and more widely used in the field of dentistry, from the first personalized surgical guides to the latest personalized restoration crowns and root implants. In particular, the bioprinting of teeth and tissue is of great potential to realize organ regeneration and finally improve the life quality. In this review paper, we firstly presented the workflow of additive manufacturing technology. Then, we summarized the main applications and recent research progresses of additive manufacturing in dentistry. Lastly, we sketched out some challenges and future directions of additive manufacturing technology in dentistry.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35252451 PMCID: PMC8894006 DOI: 10.1155/2022/5530188
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Figure 1Historical evolution of additive manufacturing.
Figure 2Workflow of additive manufacturing.
Different types of AM technology in dentistry.
| Technology | Company | Energy source | Raw material | Accuracy | Main property | Application |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SLA [ | 3D systems (USA) | Ultraviolet or visible light | Photosensitive resin, light curable liquid polymers, ceramic-filled resins, etc. | 25-35 | (i) High accuracy | (i) Restoration of defected teeth |
| SLS/SLM [ | 3D systems (USA) | High-power laser | Titanium and titanium alloy powder, cobalt chrome, aluminium, bronze alloy, stainless steel, nylon powder, elastomers, ceramics, etc. | 20-50 | (i) Good mechanical property | (i) Implant |
| EBM [ | Arcam (Sweden) | Electron | Titanium and titanium alloy powder, cobalt base alloy powder, etc. | 40-50 | (i) Good accuracy | (i) Implant |
| FDM [ | Stratasys (USA) | Extrusion | Thermoplastic filamentous material such as polylactic acid, polycarbonate, and PEEK | 35-40 | (i) Low- to midrange cost | (i) Oral implant prosthesis |
| LOM [ | 3D systems (USA) | Laser | Thin material of metal and plastic | 60-70 | (i) Rapid fabrication | (i) Jawbone model |
| IJP [ | 3D systems (USA) | Electric heater | Powder, living cells, biological materials, etc. | 35-40 | (i) High print speed | (i) Teeth |
Notes: SLA: stereolithography; SLS: selective laser sintering; SLM: selective laser melting; DLMS: direct laser metal sintering; DLMF: direct laser metal formation; EBM: electron beam melting; FDM: fused deposition modeling; LOM: laminated object manufacturing; IJP: inkjet printing; PEEK: polyether ether ketone. DWS: Digital Wax Systems; EOS: Electro Optical Systems; FIT group: Fruth Innovative Technologien group; RepRap: replicating rapid prototype.
Figure 3The schematic diagrams of various AM procedures including SLA (a), laser-based printing (b), EBM (c), FDM (d), LOM (e), and inkjet printing (f).
Figure 4Main applications of additive manufacturing in dentistry.
Figure 5Panoramic radiograph demonstrated huge defect of the left mandible due to osteoradionecrosis (a); a titanium mandibular substitute with premounted dental implant fixtures manufactured by SLM (b) was employed to restore the bony defect (c). Reprinted from [130]. Customized temporomandibular joint (TMJ) prosthesis comprised of the fossa, condylar head, and mandibular handle components (d); the novel TMJ prosthesis can precisely match the Chinese patient's TMJ anatomy (e); the lateral view of a fixed TMJ prosthesis during a surgical procedure (f). Reprinted from [131].
Figure 6The surgical splint for orthodontic treatment can be designed via CAD software (a); thereafter, SLA technology and biocompatible photosensitive resin were employed to print this splint with sophisticated features (b, c). Reprinted from [138].
Figure 7A commercialized 3D-printed Ti6Al4V implant (Tixos®, Leader Implants, Italy) was going to be inserted in the socket (a); the surface of this printed implant consisted of tremendous grooves with 14.6 to 152.5 μm in width and 21.4 to 102.4 μm in depth (b); the printed dental implant possessed satisfactory osteointegration after 3 years of functional loading due to its rough surface (c). Reprinted from [121].
Figure 8An implant-supported 3D-printed fixed denture was designed via CAD software (a). Meanwhile, a surgical stent was also printed (b) and used to guide the insertion of implants (c–f); the panoramic X-ray showed that the implants were well positioned (g); the printed fixed denture was subsequently delivered to the patient (h). Reprinted from [157].
Figure 9An intraoral optical scanner was used to scan the plaster model (a) to establish the digital model (b); then, the crown was designed and printed based on this digital model (c). Reprinted from [161].
Application of AM technology in maxillofacial surgery.
| Author | Application | Cases | Scanning | Software | Material | Process | Main results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Melville et al. [ | Surgery guide and fixation plate in maxillary reconstruction | 1 | MRI; CBCT | ProPlan (Materialise, USA) | Titanium; polyamide | SLS; FDM | Precisely correspond to the surgical defect |
| Takano et al. [ | Maxillary reconstruction | 1 | CT | Mimics (Materialize, Belgium) | Titanium | 3D printing (Stratasys, USA) | Improve safety Shorten surgery time |
| Abo Sharkh et al. [ | Cutting guides and jaw models in maxillofacial reconstruction | 19 | CT | 3DSlicer (NIH, USA) | Resin | SLA (Formlabs, USA) | The average time for VSP and fabrication of cutting guides was 158 minutes |
| Shaheen et al. [ | Occlusal splints in orthognathic surgery | 20 | CT (Siemens, Germany) | ProPlan (Materialise, Belgium) | Biocompatible material (MED610) | SLA (Objet Connex 350, Stratasys, USA) | The mean absolute distance error was 0.4 mm |
| Dumrongwongsiri et al. [ | Spacers in orthognathic surgery | 12 | CBCT | 3-matic (Materialise, Belgium) | Biocompatible material (MED610) | 3D printing (Stratasys, USA) | Mean preoperative visual analogue scale score was improved by 47.82% |
| Zhang et al. [ | Mandibular models and surgical templates in orthognathic surgery and mandibular contour osteoplasty | 10 | CBCT | Mimics (Materialise, Belgium) | Plastic | 3D printing (Objet Eden 250, Israel) | The right gonial angle was improved from 128.20° to 120.35° |
| Shaheen et al. [ | Splints in bimaxillary orthognathic surgery | 20 | CT (Siemens, Germany) | ProPlan (Materialise, Belgium) | Biocompatible material | 3D printing (Objet Connex 350, Stratasys, USA) | 95% of 3D-printed splints were clinically accepted |
| Heufelder et al. [ | Surgical guides and implants in bimaxillary orthognathic surgery | 22 | CT (Siemens, Germany) | ProPlan (Materialise, Belgium) | Not mentioned | SLM | The median deviation of the maxilla position was 0.39 mm between the preoperative plan and surgical result |
| Li et al. [ | Cutting guides and fixation plates in bimaxillary orthognathic surgery | 10 | CT (GE Healthcare, USA) | ProPlan (Materialise, Belgium) | Ti6Al4V; photosensitive resin | EBM (Arcam AB, Sweden) | Achieve good final occlusion |
Note: cases: the number of patients enrolled in the research; MRI: magnetic resonance imaging; CT: computed tomography; CBCT: cone-beam computed tomography; NIH: National Institutes of Health; VSP: virtual surgical planning; SLS: selective laser sintering; SLM: selective laser melting; SLA: stereolithography; FDM: fused deposition modeling; EBM: electron beam melting.
Application of AM technology in denture implantation.
| Author | Application | Cases | Specification | Scanning | Software | Material | Process | Main results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tunchel et al. [ | Dental implant | 82 | TixosR (Leader Implants, Italy) | CBCT | Not mentioned | Ti-6Al-4V alloy | DLMF (EosyntM270, Germany) | 3-year follow-up: survival rate (94.5%), success rate (94.3%) |
| Mangano et al. [ | Immediate dental implant | 15 | Root analogue | CBCT (CS9300, USA) | Mimics (Materialise, Belgium) | Ti-6Al-4V alloy | DLMS (Leader Implants, Italy) | 1-year follow-up: survival rate (100%) DIB (0.7 mm) |
| Figliuzzi et al. [ | Immediate dental implant in the anterior maxilla | 1 | Root analogue | CBCT (CS9300, USA) | Mimics (Materialise, Belgium) | Ti-6Al-4V alloy | DLMS | 1-year follow-up: good functional and aesthetic integration |
| Mangano et al. [ | Immediate loading of four unsplinted implants | 62 | TixosR (Leader Implants, Italy) | CBCT (CS9300, USA) | Mimics (Materialise, Belgium) | Ti-6Al-4V alloy | DLMS (EOSINT M270, Germany) | 4-year follow-up: survival rate (96.9%) |
| Mangano et al. [ | Implant templates | 20 | Tooth-supported | CBCT (CS9300, USA) | Nauta (DWS, Vicenza) | Resin | SLA (XFAB2000, DWS, Vicenza) | 96.4% of the templates were steady and suitable for clinical use |
| Derksen et al. [ | Implant templates | 66 | Tooth-supported | CBCT (Morita, Japan) | coDiagnostiX (Dental Wings, Canada) | Biomaterial (MED 610) | 3D printing (Eden 260V, Stratasys, USA) | The mean angular deviation was 2.72° |
| Xu et al. [ | Implant drills in allogenic tooth transplantation | 1 | Not mentioned | CBCT | Not mentioned | Metal powder | DLMS | The donor tooth fitted well in the recipient's alveolar bone |
| Mena-Álvarez et al. [ | Autotransplantation templates | 1 | Tooth-supported | CBCT (White Fox, France) | Not mentioned | Not mentioned | 3D printing (Explora 3D lab, Spain) | 2-year follow-up: accurate placement of the donor tooth in the recipient site with good physiological clinical and radiologic results |
Note: cases: the number of patients enrolled in the research; DIB: distance between the implant shoulder and the first visible bone-implant contact; CBCT: cone-beam computed tomography; Ti-6Al-4V: titanium-6 aluminium-4 vanadium; SLA: stereolithography; DLMS: direct laser metal sintering; DLMF: direct laser metal formation.
Application of AM technology in endodontics.
| Author | Application | Cases | Scanning | Software | Material | Process | Main results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fonseca Tavares et al. [ | Guided root canal access | 2 | CBCT | Simplant (Materialise, Belgium) | Not mentioned | 3D printing (Objet Eden 260v, Stratasys, USA) | The calcified root canals of central incisors were successfully accessed |
| Maia et al. [ | Guided root canal access | 3 | CBCT (i-CAT Classic, Brazil) | coDiagnostiX (Dental Wings GmbH, Germany) | Not mentioned | 3D printing (Objet Eden260v, Stratasys, USA) | The calcified root canals were successfully accessed |
| Lara-Mendes et al. [ | Guided root canal access | 1 | CBCT (i-CAT, PA) | Simplant (Materialise, Belgium) | Not mentioned | 3D printing (Objet Eden 260v, USA) | The calcified root canals of tooth 27 and 28 were rapidly accessed |
| Connert et al. [ | Microguided endodontics | 1 | CBCT (Accuitomo 80, USA) | coDiagnostiXTM (Dental Wings Inc., Canada) | Note mentioned | 3D printing (Objet Eden260v, Stratasys, USA) | The obliterated root canal of tooth 31 and 41 was precisely accessed |
| Torres et al. [ | Microguided endodontics | 1 | CBCT (New Tom VGi evo, Italy) | 3-matic (Materialise, Belgium) | Biocompatible material (MED 610) | 3D printing (Objet Connex 350, Stratasys, USA) | The obliterated root canal of tooth 22 was precisely accessed |
| Antal et al. [ | Root-end resection guide | 11 | CBCT (i-CAT Next Generation, USA) | SMARTGuide (DicomLAB Dental, Hungary) | Metal | SLA (ProJet MD 3510, 3D system, USA) | The median angular deviation was 3.95° |
| Ye et al. [ | Periapical surgery guide | 1 | CBCT (i-CAT 17-19, USA) | Simplant (Materialise, Belgium) | Not mentioned | 3D printing (3510SD, 3D system, USA) | The root ends were resected accurately |
| Giacomino et al. [ | Osteotomy and root-end resection guide | 3 | CBCT (3D Accuitomo 170, CA) | Mimics (Materialise, Belgium) | Not mentioned | 3D printing (Objet 260 Connex 3, USA) | All patients were asymptomatic after 1 month or 3 months |
| Popowicz et al. [ | Root-end resection guide | 2 | CBCT (CS8100, Carestream Dental, USA) | DDS-Pro (Natrodent Polska, Poland) | Polylactide | 3D printing (Prusa i3 MK2S, Czech) | The patients were asymptomatic at a 7- or 8-month follow-up visit |
| Ahn et al. [ | Periapical surgery guide | 1 | CBCT (Alphrad 3030, Japan) | OnDemand3D (Cybermed, Korea) | Biocompatible clear resin | 3D printing (Object Eden 260v, Stratasys, USA) | No postoperative complications were reported |
Notes: cases: the number of patients enrolled in the research; CBCT: cone-beam computed tomography; SLA: stereolithography.
Application of AM technology in periodontics.
| Author | Application | Cases | Scanning | Software | Material | Process | Main results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kim et al. [ | Guided tissue regeneration (In vivo) | Not applicable | Laser scanning | Not mentioned | PCL, HA | 3D printing | After 9 weeks, a putative periodontal ligament and native alveolar bone were regenerated at the interface incisor scaffold |
| Park et al. [ | Scaffold for alveolar bone regeneration (in vivo) | Not applicable | CT | Not mentioned | PCL | 3D bioprinting system (laboratory-made system in Korea Institute of Machinery and Materials, Korea) | New bone was formed adjacent to the scaffold |
| Rasperini et al. [ | Scaffold for periodontal repair | 1 | CT | NX 7.5 (Siemens PLM Software, USA) Mimics (Materialise, USA) | PCL | SLS (Formiga P100 System; EOS, Germany) | After 12-month follow-up, the patient gained a 3 mm clinical attachment and partial root coverage |
| Lei et al. [ | Guided tissue regeneration | 1 | CBCT | Mimics (Materialise, Belgium) | Biocompatible material (MED 610) | PolyJet (Objet Connex 350, Stratasys, USA) | After 3 months, the probing pocket depth was greatly reduced |
| Pilipchuk et al. [ | Scaffold for dentin, ligament, and bone regeneration (in vitro & in vivo) | Not applicable | Not mentioned | NX 7.5 (Siemens PLM Software, USA) | PCL, HA | SLS | Groove microdepth was a more important parameter than width for promoting formation of cell alignment and increasing oriented collagen fiber density |
Notes: CT: computed tomography; CBCT: cone-beam computed tomography; PCL: polycaprolactone; HA: hydroxyapatite; SLS: selective laser sintering.