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Systematic development of esthetics and function in a young patient with maxillary dental aplasia
Smile Dental Journal. 2017; 12 (2): 32-32
in English | IMEMR | ID: emr-189662
ABSTRACT

Objectives:

Full-arch rehabilitations in young patients suffering from dental agenesis should compensate for the reduced vertical dimension of occlusion and restore both esthetics and function at minimal biological cost. This requires precise planning and maximum patient compliance during the preprosthetic phase. The pretreatment period with tooth-colored splints promotes a predictable outcome of the final restorations. Clinical considerations Thanks to better restorative materials and adhesive techniques and increased knowledge of how to preserve sound tooth structures, prosthetic dentistry has increasingly turned toward minimally invasive procedures. The present clinical case documents a minimally/non-invasive maxillary full-arch rehabilitation of an agenesis patient with multiple dental aplasia, primary tooth persistence, and deficits in bone growth. The patient was pretreated with a tooth-colored CAD/CAM polycarbonate splint. Adequate esthetics and function were achieved by two zirconia-based single-wing adhesive fixed dental prostheses to replace the upper lateral incisors, lithium disilicate ceramic partial crowns for the posterior regions, and two feldspathic veneers for the upper central incisors
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Index: IMEMR (Eastern Mediterranean) Main subject: Periodontal Splints / Prosthodontics / Oral Surgical Procedures, Preprosthetic / Dental Arch / Mouth Rehabilitation Type of study: Case report Limits: Humans Language: English Journal: Smile Dent. J. Year: 2017

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Index: IMEMR (Eastern Mediterranean) Main subject: Periodontal Splints / Prosthodontics / Oral Surgical Procedures, Preprosthetic / Dental Arch / Mouth Rehabilitation Type of study: Case report Limits: Humans Language: English Journal: Smile Dent. J. Year: 2017