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1.
J Prosthodont ; 19(7): 580-5, 2010 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20561157

RESUMO

PURPOSE: The ideal taper recommended for a full-veneer crown is 4° to 14°, but this is very difficult to achieve clinically, and studies on taper achieved by dental students have found mean taper measurements ranging from 11° to 27°. The objective of this study was to examine and compare the taper of teeth prepared for full-veneer crowns by dental students on typodonts in the laboratory and on patients, and also to compare the results with those of other dental schools. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Preparations were scanned by specialized metrology equipment that gave the taper of the preparation in a buccolingual (BL) and mesiodistal (MD) plane. RESULTS: No undercut was detected on any of the laboratory specimens; however, 12.5% of clinical specimens were undercut. The mean taper of the laboratory anterior specimens were 26.7° BL and 14.9° MD, and the laboratory posterior specimens were 18.2° BL and 14.2° MD. The mean taper of the clinical anteriors were 31.6° BL and 16.8° MD, and the clinical posteriors were 16.8° BL and 22.4° MD. CONCLUSIONS: This study shows that although the taper achieved by dental students in the University of the West Indies when preparing teeth for full-veneer crowns was outside the ideal range of 4° to 14°, it is comparable to those achieved by dental students in other schools.


Assuntos
Coroas , Facetas Dentárias , Prostodontia/educação , Preparo Prostodôntico do Dente/métodos , Clínicas Odontológicas , Educação em Odontologia/métodos , Humanos , Modelos Dentários , Faculdades de Odontologia , Estudantes de Odontologia , Índias Ocidentais
2.
J Prosthodont ; 17(1): 14-9, 2008 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17971114

RESUMO

PURPOSE: Previous studies have reported on the difficulties inherent in preparing the labial aspect of teeth for metal ceramic crowns with consistency and also the implications for the definitive restoration of underprepared and overangled finish lines. In this study, a bur designed to prepare a 1.2-mm deep chamfer was tested and compared with two other bur kits. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Seventy-two teeth were prepared to receive metal ceramic crowns in vitro by students using one of the two bur kits or the new bur. Using a coordinate measuring machine (CMM), replicas of the prepared teeth were scanned in the mid-labial plane, and shoulder width and cavosurface angles were measured. RESULTS: The new bur produced preparations with a mean shoulder width and cavosurface angle of 1.146 +/- 0.241 mm and 108 +/- 11 degrees, respectively, compared with 0.626 +/- 0.234 mm and 128 +/- 14 degrees produced by a commercially available standardized crown cutting bur system and 0.626 +/- 0.218 mm and 124 +/- 15 degrees produced by the bur kit in use at our center at the time of the study. These differences were statistically significant at the 5% level, using Tukey's comparison of means. CONCLUSIONS: Teeth prepared by the new bur had wider shoulders and lower cavosurface angles than teeth prepared either with a standardized crown cutting system or locally selected bur kit. The quality of labial preparations produced by the new bur in terms of closeness to the postulated "ideal" width and angulation warrants further investigation.


Assuntos
Coroas , Adaptação Marginal Dentária , Planejamento de Prótese Dentária , Preparo Prostodôntico do Dente/instrumentação , Análise de Variância , Técnica de Fundição Odontológica , Instrumentos Odontológicos/classificação , Humanos , Técnicas In Vitro , Ligas Metalo-Cerâmicas , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes
3.
Dent Mater ; 22(10): 925-33, 2006 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16375963

RESUMO

OBJECTIVES: The aims of the study were to control the nucleation and crystal growth of selected aluminosilicate glass powders, to produce uniform leucite glass-ceramic microstructures consisting of fine (<1000 nm) grained leucite crystals. METHODS: A starting glass composition of wt%; 64.2% SiO(2), 16.1% Al(2)O(3), 10.9% K(2)O, 4.3% Na(2)O, 1.7% CaO, 0.5% LiO(2) and 0.4% TiO(2) was heated in an electric furnace and later quenched to produce glasses. The glass powders were ball milled to two different particle sizes and heat-treated using one and two-step crystallization heat treatments. Dta, Xrd, and Sem analyses was used to characterise and explore the crystallization kinetics of the glasses. RESULTS: Selected heat treatments of the glass powders produced a uniform distribution of fine tetragonal leucite crystals (mean+/-S.D.) 0.1+/-0.2 microm(2) in the glassy matrix, with minimal matrix microcraking in the glass-ceramics produced. The addition of a two-step heat treatment increased the leucite volume fraction in all instances. SIGNIFICANCE: Selected crystallization heat treatments and powder particle sizes were used to control the leucite crystal size, distribution and volume fraction, in order to produce uniformly distributed ultra fine grained tetragonal leucite glass-ceramics for dental applications.


Assuntos
Porcelana Dentária/síntese química , Silicatos de Alumínio , Cerâmica , Cristalização , Cristalografia por Raios X , Análise Diferencial Térmica , Temperatura Alta , Microscopia Eletrônica de Varredura , Tamanho da Partícula , Pós
4.
J Prosthet Dent ; 94(5): 414-20, 2005 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16275300

RESUMO

STATEMENT OF PROBLEM: The various clinical techniques available for even reduction of a tooth surface to receive a porcelain veneer restoration do not produce a consistently even conservative reduction. In addition, it is not known which technique is most conservative of enamel. PURPOSE: The purpose of this pilot study was to assess the effectiveness of 3 clinical techniques, namely, dimple, depth groove, and freehand, in producing an intraenamel preparation. The relation between overpreparation beyond the commonly accepted depth of preparation of 0.5 mm and dentin exposure was also examined. MATERIAL AND METHODS: A single operator prepared 3 groups of 5 extracted maxillary central incisors to a depth of 0.5 mm using dimple, depth-groove, and freehand methods of tooth preparation. The prepared teeth were scanned using an x-ray microtomography scanner. The reconstructed images were studied using software that provided a volume-rendering routine so that, by choosing suitable x-ray linear attenuation coefficient thresholds, enamel (2.78 cm(-1) at 40 keV) and dentin (1.63 cm(-1) at 40 keV) surfaces could be viewed. The percentage area of enamel conserved was analyzed from these images. Coordinate metrology was used to produce color-coded images depicting the depth of preparation. The Kruskal-Wallis test was used to determine the statistical significance (alpha=.05) in the difference between the mean percentage area of enamel conserved in the 3 technique groups. The coordinate metrology and x-ray microtomography images were visually compared to study the correlation between overpreparation and dentin exposure. RESULTS: The Kruskal-Wallis test did not demonstrate significant difference (P=.07) between the 3 techniques in conserving enamel. However, the dimple technique showed a greater trend to retaining a larger mean percentage area of enamel (77.5% +/- 14.2) compared to depth-groove (50.1% +/- 17.5) and freehand (76.8% +/- 24.4) techniques. Preparation depth in the range of 0.4 to 0.6 mm was largely seen to be intraenamel, except in the cervical region. CONCLUSION: Within the limitations of this pilot study, the 3 different techniques tested did not differ significantly in conserving enamel.


Assuntos
Porcelana Dentária , Facetas Dentárias , Dentina , Preparo Prostodôntico do Dente/efeitos adversos , Preparo Prostodôntico do Dente/métodos , Humanos , Incisivo , Projetos Piloto , Estatísticas não Paramétricas , Tomografia por Raios X/métodos
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