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Dent Mater ; 33(8): 954-965, 2017 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28641745

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Separately addressing the fatigue resistance (ISO 14801, evaluation of final product) and aging behavior (ISO 13356, standardized sample) of oral implants made from yttria-stabilized zirconia proved to be insufficient in verifying their long-term stability, since (1) implant processing is known to significantly influence transformation kinetics and (2) aging, up from a certain level, is liable to decrease fatigue resistance. Therefore, the aim of this investigation was to apply a new testing protocol considering environmental conditions adequately inducing aging during dynamic fatigue. METHODS: Zirconia implants were dynamically loaded (107 cycles), hydrothermally aged (85°, 60 days) or subjected to both treatments simultaneously. Subsequent, monoclinic intensity ratios (Xm) were obtained by locally resolved X-ray microdiffraction (µ-XRD2). Transformation propagation was monitored at cross-sections by µ-Raman spectroscopy and scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Finally, implants were statically loaded to fracture. Linear regression models (fracture load) and mixed models (Xm) were used for statistical analyses. RESULTS: All treatments resulted in increased fracture load (p≤0.005), indicating the formation of transformation induced compressive stresses around surface defects during all treatment modalities. However, only hydrothermal and combinational treatment were found to increase Xm (p<0.001). No change in Xm was observed for solely dynamically loaded samples (p≥0.524). Depending on the variable observed, a monoclinic layer thickness of 1-2µm (SEM) or 6-8µm (Raman spectroscopy) was measured at surfaces exposed to water during treatments. SIGNIFICANCE: Hydrothermal aging was successfully induced during dynamic fatigue. Therefore, the presented setup might serve as reference protocol for ensuring pre-clinically long-term reliability of zirconia oral implants.


Subject(s)
Dental Implants , Materials Testing , Zirconium , Kinetics , Microscopy, Electron, Scanning , Reproducibility of Results , Stress, Mechanical , Surface Properties , X-Ray Diffraction
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