| Literature DB >> 36013131 |
Nadin Al-Haj Husain1,2, Mutlu Özcan2, Nataliya Dydyk3,4, Tim Joda4,5.
Abstract
The aim of this systematic review was to provide an overview of the technical and clinical outcomes of conventional, speed sintering and high-speed sintering protocols of zirconia in the dental field. Data on precision, mechanical and optical parameters were evaluated and related to the clinical performance of zirconia ceramic. The PICOS search strategy was applied using MEDLINE to search for in vitro and in vivo studies using MeSH Terms by two reviewers. Of 66 potentially relevant studies, 5 full text articles were selected and 10 were further retrieved through a manual search. All 15 studies included in the systematic review were in vitro studies. Mechanical, precision and optical properties (marginal and internal fit, fracture strength and modulus, wear, translucency and opalescence, aging resistance/hydrothermal aging) were evaluated regarding 3-, 4- and 5-YTZP zirconia material and conventional, high- and high-speed sintering protocols. Mechanical and precision results were similar or better when speed or high-speed sintering methods were used for 3-, 4- and 5-YTZP zirconia. Translucency is usually reduced when 3 Y-TZP is used with speed sintering methods. All types of zirconia using the sintering procedures performed mechanically better compared to lithium disilicate glass ceramics but glass ceramics showed better results regarding translucency.Entities:
Keywords: aesthetics; all-ceramic; clinical outcome; cost efficacy; dental; dental materials; firing; mechanical; post-processing; pre-processing; prosthetic dentistry; sintering; speed sintering; systematic review; technical; time efficacy; zirconia; zirconium dioxide
Year: 2022 PMID: 36013131 PMCID: PMC9409711 DOI: 10.3390/jcm11164892
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.964
PICO search strategy.
| Focused Question (PICO) | For the Sintering of Zirconia, is Speed and High-Speed Sintering Comparable to Conventional Sintering in Terms of Mechanical Characteristics, Quality Fit and Volume Stability, Esthetics, Pre- and Post-Processing, and Economics Related to Time-/Cost-Efficiency? | |
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Figure 1Systematic search results illustrated as a Flow diagram.
Characteristics of included studies. CS: Conventional sintering; S: Speed sintering SS: Super Speed sintering.
| Author/ | Journal | Study Type | Restoration [ | Material/ | Grain | Manufacturing Technique | Sintering (Sintering, Holding Time, Cooling Time) | Test Method | Control Group | Test Group | Outcome |
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| Soult et al., 2019 [ | Gen Dent | In vitro | 20 | CAD/CAM blocks (CEREC Zirconia, medi S, shade A2) | 3-YTZP | Milling unit (CEREC MC XL) | (1) high-speed furnace (CEREC SpeedFire furnace) for 26.2 min with pre-drying and proprietary firing parameters | Fracture strength and modulus | Sintering protocol 2 | Sintering protocol 1 | (1) No difference in flexural strength, flexural modulus, translucency or opalescence. |
| Ahmed et al., 2019 [ | J Proshtodont | In vitro | 120 | IPS e.max | 3- | 5-axis milling machine (Wield Select; | 1- Conventional sintering furnace (Programat S1 Furnace; Ivoclar Vivadent US). | Marginal Discrepancy (Digital Microscope) | 1–6: sintering protocol 1, 7–12: sintering protocol 2 G1/G7 (0.5 mm chamfer, 0.8 mm thick); G2/G8 (0.5 mm chamfer, 1.5 mm thick); G3/G9 (1.0 mm chamfer, 0.8 mm thick); G4/10 (1.0 mm chamfer, 1.5 mm thick); G5/G11 (1.2 mm chamfer, 0.8 mm thick); G6/G12 (1.2 mm cham- fer, 1.5 mm thick). | Significant interaction between finish line widths, crown thickness and sintering protocol on the marginal gaps in both sintering protocols | |
| Nakamura et al., 2020 [ | J Proshtodont Res | In vitro | 28 | InCoris TZI, Dentsply Sirona and (CEREC inLab MC X5, Dentsply Sirona) | 3-YTZP | Milling machine (CEREC MC XL, Dentsply Sirona) | CS: at 1510 °C in laboratory furnace for 220 min (inFire HTC Speed, Dentsply Sirona) | Fit (Digital microscope)Fracture load (Universal testing machine) | Sintering protocol 1 | Sintering protocol 2 | Monolithic zirconia crowns produced by high-speed sintering showed no significant difference in the marginal gap and the fracture load after aging or occurrence of monoclinic crystals compared to conventional sintering. |
| Edwards Rezende et al., 2017 [ | Dent Mater | In vitro | 36 | (1) Z-MAX, | 3-YTZP | Milling procedure (MC XL milling machine; Sirona Dental Systems GmbH—Bensheim, Germany) | High-temperature furnace was used (Sintramat High Temperature Furnace; Ivoclar Vivadent; Liechtenstein) with a default cycle of 7 h and 52 min and a maximum temperature of 1500 °C. | Marginal and internal fit (micro-CT) | Before sintering | After sintering | No difference for marginal fit, with differences only for internal fit and between the different regions measured. |
| Wiedenmann et al., 2020 [ | Dent Mater | In vitro | 192 | Ceramill Zolid HT+, Amann Girrbach AG) | 3-YTZP | Milling machine (Ceramill motion, Amann Girrbach AG) | Sintered at 1580 °C (high-speed sintering) or 1450 °C (control group | Fracture load with and without aging (Universal testing machine) | Sintering protocol 2 | Sintering protocol 1; 3 different groups with different layers (0.5, 1, 1.5 mm) | High-speed sintering resulted in less two-body wear of the zirconia and comparable or even higher fracture load results than the control group. |
| Kaizer et al., 2017 [ | Ceram Int | In vitro | 30 | translucent Y-TZP (inCoris TZI, Sirona) | 3-YTZP | CAD/CAM-milled, sintered and glazed by Sirona | Super-speed (SS, 1580 °C, dwell time 10 min), Speed (S, 1510 °C, dwell time 25 min), and Long-term (LT, 1510 °C, dwell time 120 min). | - Microstructure (wear depth and volume loss for the steatite antagonists on 3D images of micro computed tomography scanner) | 3 Sintering protocols | Micropits in the wear crater were less frequent for the LT group. Groups S and SS exhibited more surface pits, scratched steatite surface and a greater volume loss. Tetragonal to monoclinic phase transformation, resulting from the sliding wear process, was present in all three groups. | |
| Cokic et al., 2020 [ | Dent Mater | In vitro | 64 | Katana STMLCS, STMLSS (Kuraray Noritake) | 5-YTZP | Plates with dimensions of approximate 15 × 15 × 3.5 mm | Katana STMLSS (Kuraray Noritake) (total thermal cycle/sintering time/dwell temperature: 30 min/16 min/1560 °C) and CEREC Zirconia (CEREC ZrSS) (Dentsply Sirona) (15 min/2 min/1578 °C) were compared to conventionally sintered (CS) Katana STMLCS (6.8 h/2 h/1550 °C) and inCoris TZICS (4 h/2 h/1510 °C). | Translucency parameter and contrast ratio (spectrophotometer) Chemical composition (X-ray fluorescence spectroscopy) and phase composition (X-ray diffraction). | 2 Groups | 2 Groups (S) | SS and CS zirconia revealed similar density, microstructure, average strength and hydrothermal aging stability. Both Katana STMLSS/CS 5Y-PSZ ceramics were characterized with a higher content of cubic phase (≈53 wt%), resulting in higher amount of Y2O3 in the remaining tetragonal ZrO2 phases compared to the 3Y-TZP CEREC ZrSS and inCoris TZICS (8 and 20 wt%, respectively). The sintering program did not affect the hydrothermal aging behavior of Katana STMLSS and CEREC ZrSS. TP of Katana STMLSS (TP ≈ 32) was not affected by speed sintering, while the translucency of CEREC ZrSS (TP = 14) was significantly reduced. Hardness, fracture toughness and Weibull characteristic strength of Katana STMLSS and CEREC ZrSS also reached the optimal level, but speed sintering substantially lowered their mechanical reliability. |
| Al-Zordk et al., 2020 [ | J Prosthet Dent | In vitro | 80 | 4 zirconia brands (Zolid FX Preshaded, Zolid FX White, DD Cubex2, and DD Bio ZX2) | 3-Y-TZP | Milled from A2 pre-shaded blanks except for Zolid FX White disks which were milled from white blanks with subsequent immersion in A2 coloring liquid | Sintering time/dwell temperature: | Color stability, contrast ratio and the translucency parameter after coffee thermocycling | 4 Groups (CS) | 4 Groups (S) | The color and the translucency of the translucent zirconia can be affected by the type of the zirconia brand and the sintering protocol. Furthermore, the color and the translucency were affected by both the clinical adjustment procedure and the coffee thermocycling, but not beyond the clinically acceptable limit of the color difference. |
| Lawson et al., 2020 [ | J Esthet Restor Dent | In vitro | 40 | (Katana STML Block, Prettau Ante- rior, and Zpex Smile) | 3-YTZP | Katana STML Block and Prettau Anterior (dry sectioned and dry polished). Specimens of Zpex Smile were fabricated by obtaining pure powders and pressing into molds. IPS e.max CAD (wet sectioned and wet polished) | Conventional (7 h) or high-speed (18 or 30 min in a SpeedFire furnace) sintering | - Translucency (Color-i7spectrophotometer); - Flexural strength (3-point bending test) | lithium disilicate material | Katana STML, Prettau Anterior, and Zpex Smile | - Significant differences between materials for flexural strength, translucency parameter and grain size ( |
| Jansen et al., 2019 [ | J Prosthet Dent | In vitro | 450 | Ceramill ZI | 3-YTZP3-YTZP4-YTZP | 5 thicknesses (1.0, 1.5, 2.0, 2.5, and 3.0 mm); milled (Ceramill Motion 2; Amann Girrbach AG) | Final temperature 1570 °C and 1590 °C and a reference sintering protocol (1450 °C) | monoclinic phase content (Raman spectrometry) | Conventional sintering protocol | Speed sintering protocol | For ZI, the sintering protocols did not affect the translucency or biaxial flexural strength. ZD and HT+ showed significantly lower translucency for high-speed sintering protocols ( |
| Lümkemann et al., 2021 [ | J Prosthet Dent | In vitro | 210 | 3Y-TZP0.25 ( | 3Y-TZP | Milled (Ceramill Match 2/Ceramill Motion 2; Amann Girrbach AG) | Conventionally sintered at 1450 °C (3Y-TZP0.25, 3Y-TZP0.05, 5Y-TZP, and half of 4Y-TZP) or high-speed sintered at 1580 °C (the other half of 4Y-TZP and pre4Y-TZP) | Translucency (UV/Vis spectrophotometer) | Conventional sintering protocol | Speed sintering protocol | The decrease in translucency related to aging hours was higher for LiS2 and conventional sintered zirconia materials than for 4Y-TZPspeed and pre4Y-TZPspeed. Initially, 3Y-TZP0.25 had the highest flexural strength, followed by 3Y-TZP0.05, 4Y-TZP and pre4Y-TZPspeed. pre4Y-TZPspeed was comparable with 4Y-TZPspeed but significantly higher than 5Y-TZP. LiSi2 had the lowest biaxial flexural strength. Hydrothermal aging increased biaxial flexural strength for 3Y-TZP0.25 and 3Y-TZP0.05 but decreased it for 5Y-TZP and pre4Y-TZPspeed. After aging, 4Y-TZPspeed showed comparable values of flexural strength with 4Y-TZP and higher values than pre4Y-TZPspeed after aging. |
| Jerman et al., 2020 [ | Dent Mater | In vitro | 288 | (ZI Zolid; Zolid HT+; Amann Girrbach AG) | 3-YTZP4-YTZP | Milled using a five-axis milling machine (Ceramill Motion 2, Amann Girrbach, Koblach, Austria) | High-speed sintering protocol (final temperature 1580 °C) or a conventional sintering protocol (control group, final temperature 1450 °C) | flexural strength (Universal testing machine) | Conventional sintering protocol | Speed sintering protocol | ZI showed the highest and HT+ the lowest FS, regardless of the sintering protocols and aging regimens. High-speed sintered HT+ showed higher initial FS than the control group. ZI and Zolid showed higher FS after thermo-mechanical aging. High-speed sintered HT+ showed higher FS in the initial stage. |
| Elisa Kauling et al., 2020 [ | J Prosthet Dent | In vitro | 48 | zirconia blocks (CEREC Zirconia Medi S A2, Lot 2016219456; Dentsply Sirona), | 3-YTZP | 3-unit FDPSs | Speed sintering (group S) by using the SpeedFire (Dentsply Sirona) for 25 min and the conventional sintering (group C) by using the inFire HTC speed (Dentsply Sirona) for 4 h | Fit (image analysis software pro- gram (Optimas 6.5 version 6.51–1999; Media Cybernetics) | Conventional sintering protocol | Speed sintering protocol | - Group S showed a better marginal and occlusal fit than group C. For the fracture load values, no significant difference was found because of the sintering procedure or the interaction of the sintering procedure and artificial aging. |
| Michailova et al., 2020 [ | J Mech Behav Biomed Mater | In vitro | 96 | Katana Zirconia STML Block (KZC), Katana Zirconia STML Disc (KZL) and IPS e. max ZirCAD Prime (EZL). Lithium disilicate ceramic (IPS e. max Press, ELC) | KZC and KZL: 4Y-TZP | Milled (Ceramill Motion2, Amann Girrbach, Koblach, Austria) | Sintered according to the manufacturer’s instructions (Nabertherm, Lilienthal, Germany) at 1550 °C (KZL) and 1500 °C (EZL). | Translucency (UV/Vis spectrophotometer) | (ELC). | KZL, KZC, EZL | The high-speed sintering of zirconia showed neither a negative impact on the fracture load nor on the two-body wear. However, the optical properties and the reliability of zirconia is lower than those of highly translucent lithium disilicate ceramic. |
| Ersoy et al., 2015 [ | Acta Biomater Odontol Scand | In vitro | 120 | (In-Coris ZI, In-Coris TZI) | 3 Y-TZP | Cut using a low-speed diamond saw | Three groups and sintered at different final sintering temperatures and for various durations: CS) 1510 ° C for 120 min, S) 1540 °C for 25 min and SS) 1580 °C for 10 min. | Grain sizes (scanning electron microscopy (SEM)) | Conventional sintering protocol | Speed sintering protocol | The highest flexural strength was observed in ZI and TZI samples sintered (SS). The differences between the ZI samples sintered at CS and those sintered at S were statistically insignificant. Also, TZI samples sintered at CS and those sintered at S also did not show any statistically significant differences. There were no visible differences in the grain sizes between the ZI and TZI specimens. The XRD patterns indicated similar crystalline structure for both materials subjected to the three different procedures. |