A critical evaluation of the material properties and clinical suitability of in‐house printed and commercial tooth replicas for endodontic training

Aim To assess the suitability of several 3D‐printed resins for the manufacturing of tooth replicas for endodontic training in comparison with commercially available replicas by analysing the properties of the materials and comparing them with real teeth during endodontic training. Methodology Tooth...

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Veröffentlicht in:International endodontic journal 2020-10, Vol.53 (10), p.1446-1454
Hauptverfasser: Reymus, M., Stawarczyk, B., Winkler, A., Ludwig, J., Kess, S., Krastl, G., Krug, R.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Aim To assess the suitability of several 3D‐printed resins for the manufacturing of tooth replicas for endodontic training in comparison with commercially available replicas by analysing the properties of the materials and comparing them with real teeth during endodontic training. Methodology Tooth replicas were 3D‐printed using four resins (NextDent Model, NextDent C&B, V‐Print ee and Vero White Plus) and compared with two commercially available products (VDW and Smile Factory) as well as extracted human teeth. Martens hardness, indentation modulus and radiopacity were investigated on these tooth replicas. Experienced dentists evaluated the suitability of the replicas for endodontic training by comparing them with real teeth in terms of appearance, anatomy, radiopacity, similarity to dentine during access opening, canal gauging and canal instrumentation. Data were analysed using the Kolmogorov–Smirnov and Mann–Whitney U‐test. Results The greatest hardness values were recorded for human dentine (P 
ISSN:0143-2885
1365-2591
DOI:10.1111/iej.13361