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J Mech Behav Biomed Mater ; 50: 13-22, 2015 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26091568

ABSTRACT

AIM: To evaluate wear and marginal quality of resin composite restorations over eight years of clinical service in vivo. METHODS: 30 patients received 68 resin composite restorations (36 Grandio, 32 Tetric Ceram) in the course of a prospective clinical trial. 3-D evaluation of 36 selected teeth involving 144 epoxy replicas was carried out using a special 3-D scanning device with an accuracy of U1=2.5+L/350 µm; U3=3+L/300 µm. In vivo replicas were sputter-coated with gold and examined under a SEM at 200× magnification. Marginal integrity between resin composite and enamel was expressed as a percentage of the entire judgeable margin length. RESULTS: During the clinical 8-year observation period, wear significantly increased in the restored areas as well as in OCAs. RBCs under investigation showed no significant differences regarding wear (p>0.05). Localization of the restorations (premolar vs. molar or upper vs. lower) did not show a significant influence on wear rates (p>0.05). Clinically, by SEM, and by 3-D scanning distinct changes of worn contours on enamel and RBC were visible. Quantitative margin analysis revealed a change of perfect margins (58% at baseline vs. 14% at 8 years), positive step formations (15% at baseline vs. 10% at 8 years), and negative step formations (20% at baseline vs. 71% at 8 years) over time (p<0.001). Regarding the portion of gap-free margins (baseline vs. 2 years) and total margin length (baseline to 8 years), Grandio showed lower values (Mann-Whitney U-test; p<0.05). The portion of negative step formations was lower for Tetric Ceram at baseline (Mann-Whitney-U test; p<0.05). CONCLUSIONS: After eight years of clinical service, neither wear nor marginal quality was a critical factor for estimation and survival of extended posterior resin composite restorations.


Subject(s)
Dental Restoration, Permanent , Mechanical Phenomena , Resins, Synthetic , Adult , Dental Restoration Failure , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Time Factors , Young Adult
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