Journal article

Microleakage of composite crowns luted on CAD/CAM-milled human molars: a new method for standardized in vitro tests


Authors listSchlenz, Maximiliane Amelie; Schmidt, Alexander; Rehmann, Peter; Niem, Thomas; Woestmann, Bernd

Publication year2019

Pages511-517

JournalClinical Oral Investigations

Volume number23

Issue number2

ISSN1432-6981

eISSN1436-3771

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1007/s00784-018-2460-8

PublisherSpringer


Abstract
ObjectivesTo investigate debonding of full crowns made of CAD/CAM composites, CAD/CAM technology was applied to manufacture standardized test abutments to increase the reproducibility of human teeth used in in vitro studies.Materials and methodsA virtual test abutment and the corresponding virtual crown were designed and two STL data sets were generated. Sixty-four human third molars and CAD/CAM blocks were milled using a CNC machine. Crowns of four different composite blocks (Lava Ultimate (LU), Brilliant Crios (BC), Cerasmart (CS), Experimental (EX)) were adhesively bonded with their corresponding luting system (LU: Scotchbond Universal/RelyX Ultimate; BC: One Coat 7 Universal/DuoCem; CS: G-PremioBond/G-Cem LinkForce; EX: Experimental-Bond/Experimental-Luting-Cement). Half of the specimens were chemical-cured (CC) and the others were light-cured (LC). Afterwards, specimens were artificially aged in a chewing simulator (WL-tec, 1 million cycles, 50-500N, 2Hz, 37 degrees C). Finally, a dye penetration test was used to detect debonding. For inspection, the specimens were sliced, and penetration depth was measured with a digital microscope. Data were analyzed with the Mann-Whitney U test.ResultsNo cases of total debonding were observed after cyclic loading. However, the LC specimens showed a significantly lower amount of leakage than the CC ones (p<0.05). Furthermore, the CC specimens exhibited broad scattering. Only the LC-EX blocks showed no debonding. The CC-CS blocks showed the highest leakage and scattering of all tested specimens.ConclusionsNatural human teeth can be manufactured by CAD/CAM technology in highly standardized test abutments for in vitro testing. For CAD/CAM composites, light curing should be performed.Clinical relevanceThe success of a restoration depends on the long-term sealing ability of the luting materials, which avoids debonding along with microleakage. For CAD/CAM composites, separate light curing of the adhesive and luting composite is highly recommended.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleSchlenz, M., Schmidt, A., Rehmann, P., Niem, T. and Woestmann, B. (2019) Microleakage of composite crowns luted on CAD/CAM-milled human molars: a new method for standardized in vitro tests, Clinical Oral Investigations, 23(2), pp. 511-517. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00784-018-2460-8

APA Citation styleSchlenz, M., Schmidt, A., Rehmann, P., Niem, T., & Woestmann, B. (2019). Microleakage of composite crowns luted on CAD/CAM-milled human molars: a new method for standardized in vitro tests. Clinical Oral Investigations. 23(2), 511-517. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00784-018-2460-8



Keywords


Adhesive cementationBLOCKSCAMCERAMIC CROWNSCURING MODEDebondingFATIGUEFRACTURE-RESISTANCEMICROLEAKAGE

Last updated on 2025-21-05 at 18:26