In vitro performance of full-contour zirconia single crowns
Abstract Objectives Zirconia based restorations exhibited high failure rates due to veneering–porcelain fractures. Milling to full-contour might be an alternative approach for zirconia restorations. The aim of this study was to evaluate full-contour zirconia crowns in terms of light-transmission, co...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Dental materials 2012-04, Vol.28 (4), p.449-456 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Abstract Objectives Zirconia based restorations exhibited high failure rates due to veneering–porcelain fractures. Milling to full-contour might be an alternative approach for zirconia restorations. The aim of this study was to evaluate full-contour zirconia crowns in terms of light-transmission, contact wear (restoration and antagonist) and load-bearing capacity. Powder build-up veneered zirconia substructures and CAD/CAM-veneered zirconia substructures served as controls. Methods Four different kinds of crowns were fabricated on 12 metal dies: zirconia substructure with powder build-up porcelain (veneering technique), zirconia substructure with CAD/CAM generated veneering (sintering technique), full-contour zirconia glazed (glazed full-contour) and full-contour zirconia polished (polished full-contour). All crowns had the same dimensions. After light-transmission was measured the crowns were cemented on the corresponding metal dies. The specimens were loaded according to a special wear method in the chewing simulator (120,000 mechanical cycles, 5 kg load, 0.7 mm sliding movement, 320 thermocycles). Wear of the restoration and the antagonist were measured. All specimens were loaded until failure. One-way ANOVA and a LSD post-hoc test were used to compare data at a level of 5%. Results Polished full-contour showed significantly higher light transmission than the other groups ( p = 0.003; ANOVA). Polished full-contour exhibited significantly less contact wear at the restoration ( p = 0.01; ANOVA) and higher contact wear at the antagonist ( p = 0.016; ANOVA) compared to the other groups. Glazed full-contour zirconia showed similar contact wear at the antagonist compared to veneering technique ( p = 0.513, post-hoc LSD). Crowns with conventional veneering showed significantly lower load-bearing capacity ( p < 0.001; ANOVA). Significance Milling zirconia to full-contour with glazed surface might be an alternative to traditionally veneered restorations. |
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ISSN: | 0109-5641 1879-0097 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.dental.2011.11.024 |