Dentures Clinical Trial
Official title:
Evaluation of Wear Characteristics of Nano-Hybrid Denture Teeth
The majority of teeth utilized in the fabrication of conventional complete dentures are made
of acrylic resins. These acrylic teeth provide increased bond strength to the denture base
and are much easier to adjust for correct denture occlusion compared to teeth made of harder
materials, such as porcelain. However, the acrylic teeth will wear faster than the porcelain
teeth, leading to alterations in how the teeth contact each other if the denture is not
replaced periodically (typically every 5-8 years). With the increase in biting and chewing
forces that can be achieved during function with dentures supported by dental implants, the
rate of tooth wear may be increased, leading to more frequent need for replacement of the
prosthesis. Acrylic teeth made of nano hybrid composite material (NHC) potentially offer
greater wear resistance and aesthetic characteristics. The NHC teeth employ a wide range of
fillers, including highly cross-linked organic macrofillers, high-density inorganic
microfillers and silanized silica based nanofillers. The macrofillers are, to a large part,
responsible for the adequate strength and color-stability of the teeth, whereas the
microfillers improve the wear resistance. The nanofillers offer fundamentally different
optical behaviour from those of larger fillers, improving light reflection without lowering
the translucency. This offers additional opportunities in the development of composite
teeth, which have to exhibit lifelike aesthetics and translucency. These teeth made of
nano-particles and hybrid composites can be made with two different techniques, one where
the materials are pressed together and another using an injection technique. The injection
method has been found to have better aesthetic results, but resistance to wear in clinical
use has not been established.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the wear characteristics of new resin denture teeth
(nano particles - hybrid composite) made by an injection technique. Twenty-four edentulous
subjects will be enrolled who have completed implant placement for mandibular implant
overdentures opposing a maxillary complete denture or implant overdenture, or patients that
have previously received these dentures and are interested in having new dentures. Both
maxillary and mandibular dentures will be fabricated using injection molded nano-hybrid
composite denture teeth. The wear of denture teeth will be evaluated using
stereophotographic recordings at baseline, 6, 12, 18 and 24 months after denture treatment.
n/a
Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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