| Literature DB >> 35267729 |
Cristina Herráez-Galindo1, María Rizo-Gorrita1, Serafín Maza-Solano1, María-Angeles Serrera-Figallo1, Daniel Torres-Lagares1.
Abstract
Yttria-stabilized tetragonal zirconia polycrystal (Y-TZP) and polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA) are used very often in dentistry. Y-TZP is the most widely used zirconia dental ceramic, and PMMA has classically been used in removable prosthesis manufacturing. Both types of materials are commercialized in CAD/CAM system blocks and represent alternatives for long-lasting temporary (PMMA) or definitive (Y-TZP) implantological abutments. The aim of the present work is to reveal that human gingival fibroblasts (HGFs) have a favorable response when they are in contact with Y-TZP or PMMA as a dental implant abutment or implant-supported fixed prosthesis, and also to review their principal characteristics. We conducted an electronic search in the PubMed database. From an initial search of more than 32,000 articles, the application of filters reduced this number to 5104. After reading the abstracts and titles, we reduced the eligible articles to 23. Ultimately, we have included eight articles in this review.Entities:
Keywords: computer-aided design/computer-aided manufacturing (CAD/CAM) materials; gingival fibroblast; polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA); yttria-stabilized tetragonal zirconia polycrystal (Y-TZP)
Year: 2022 PMID: 35267729 PMCID: PMC8912793 DOI: 10.3390/polym14050906
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Polymers (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4360 Impact factor: 4.329
Figure 1Clinical example of Y-TZP (Corcon® htML Dentsply Sirona, York, PA, USA) used in an implant for definitive rehabilitation: (a) Frontal clinical view of the definitive prosthesis placed over five implants, (b) View of the design software used in this clinical case (inLab CAD Dentsply Sirona, York, PA, USA).
Figure 2Clinical example of PMMA (Telio CAD Ivoclar-Vivadent, Schaan, Liechtenstein) used in an implant for temporary rehabilitation: (a) Lateral clinical view of the definitive prosthesis placed over five implants, (b) View of the design software used in this clinical case (inLab CAD Dentsply Sirona, York, PA, USA).
Overview of the search strategy following the PICO format.
| PICO Question | What Are the Differences between Fibroblast Behavior on YTZP and PMMA? | |
|---|---|---|
| Search strategy | P | edentulous OR crown OR edentulism OR fixed dental prosthesis OR implant-supported prosthesis OR implant-supported denture OR dental prosthesis, implant-supported OR dental abutment |
| I | yttria-stabilized tetragonal zirconia polycrystal OR ytzp OR y-tzp OR ytzps OR y-tzps AND cad cam | |
| C | polymethyl methacrylate OR pmma AND cad cam | |
| O | fibroblasts OR gingival fibroblast OR gingiva | |
Search strategy and results of identification, screening for eligibility, and inclusion of publications considered for review.
| Identification | Records identified through electronic database search according to PICO format (PubMed) | Records identified through electronic database search according to keyword combination strategy (PubMed and Scopus) | |
| Screening | Filter application | ||
| Studies screened (title and abstract) | |||
| Eligibility | |||
| Included | |||
Inclusion and exclusion criteria list.
| Inclusion Criteria | Exclusion Criteria |
|---|---|
| Publications in English or Spanish | Studies on animals |
| CAD/CAM Y-TZP or PMMA | Patients rehabilitated with removal prosthesis |
| Fixed implant prosthesis | Teeth restorations |
| Implant abutment | The material’s aesthetic characteristics |
| The material’s physical and biological characteristics | Implant material |
Figure 3Risk of bias graph, review of authors’ judgements about each risk of bias item presented as a percentage.
Overview of included studies.
| Author, | Study Type | Material | Implants/Discs | Aim | Main Conclusion |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bagegni A et al. | Systematic review | Metal-ceramic | 8938 | Assess the influence of various restorative materials on implant survival supporting FCDs **. | Implant-supported FCD material selection seems not to affect prosthetic survival rates. |
| Meta-analysis | Alloy | ||||
| Pituru SM et al. | Review | PMMA | NR | Synthetize main PMMA characteristics as interim implant-prosthetic restoration material. | PMMA is an interim prosthetic material with predictable prosthetic results. |
| Shim JS et al. | In vitro study | Poly(ethyl methacrylate) PMMA | 210 | Evaluate HGFs’ response to various interim prosthetic materials fabricated using three methods (direct, indirect, CAD/CAM). | PMMA manufactured by CAD/CAM system offers lower cytotoxicity to HGF and better cell attachment. |
| Herráez-Galindo C et al. | In vitro study | PMMA | NR | Compare material surface and HGF behavior. | The two materials exhibited similar cellular reactions. |
| Guilardi LF et al. | In vitro study | Y-TZP | 30 | Characterize and compare the effect of various aging regimens on surface characteristics, structural stability, and mechanical performance. | None of the aging regimens impaired Y-TZP’s mechanical behavior. |
| Díez-Quijano C et al. | Randomized clinical trial | POM | 49 | Evaluate clinical performance of both CAD/CAM materials in implant-supported interim restorations. | PMMA performed better than POM. |
| Rizo-Gorrita M et al. | In vitro study | PMMA | 160 | Evaluate cytotoxic effect and COL-1 secretion of HGFs for materials studied. | Ceramic materials showed better cell responses than polymer materials. |
| Pandoleon P et al. | In vitro study | Y-TZP | 315 | Investigate biological effect of Y-TZP abutment compared to LS2 and Ti and HGFs’ viability and attachment properties. | Comparable biological results in Y-TZP and conventional abutment materials. |
* Implant-supported FCDs, ** FCDs (fixed completed dentures).