Clinical Trials Logo

Immediate Dentin Sealing clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Immediate Dentin Sealing.

Filter by:
  • None
  • Page 1

NCT ID: NCT05265559 Recruiting - Adhesion Clinical Trials

Influence of Operator Factors on Succes and Survival of Indirect Restorations

Start date: October 9, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

Background: Nowadays, tissue preserving, aesthetically high-quality and sustainable dentistry is more and more becoming the standard way of treatment. To reach those standards, one of the treatment options is applying a partial indirect restoration made by glass ceramics using immediate dental sealing (IDS). Using IDS, a protocol is followed to applicate a dentin bonding agent to freshly cut dentin when it is exposed during tooth preparation for indirect restorations (inlays/onlays, crowns). The preparation made for partial restorations is minimal invasive. Glass ceramic restorations have very high survival rates (90 to 100% after five years) (Morimoto et al., 2016) and glass ceramic mimics the color and structure of the tooth very well. This kind of treatment is gaining interest and increasingly applied however little information is available on the long-term effects when multiple general practitioners apply these restorations. Objectives: The main goal of this study is to evaluate partial posterior ceramic restorations with the application of an immediate dentin sealing (IDS) performed by various practitioners. Study design and population: Twenty dental practitioners, who followed a course on making ceramic partial restorations using IDS, will be asked to include patients for this study. The dental practitioners are being asked to share their data (occlusal light photo's, impression and x-rays) of twenty-five restorations they make after having the course. Restorations of individuals with a minimum age of 18 will be included. The information from pictures and impressions will be evaluated. Items to evaluate The practitioners will be interviewed to get to know in what circumstances they do their treatment. Items that are discussed are: - using rubber dam; - using magnification by means of loupes/microscope; - scheduled time for the treatment; - number of restorations after following the course. Initial data (gathered directly after treatment) will be evaluated looking at: - surface of preparation after IDS; - size of the prepared surface; - color. Follow up data will be evaluated looking at: - tooth extraction - fracture restoration - fracture tooth - secondairy caries - de-bonding - endodontic problems Outcome: Failures (fracture, de-bonding, secondairy cariës, endodontic problems) are the main outcome measurements. Description and estimation of the load and risk for the subjects: No extra intervention is performed. The dental practitioners will provide their data (i.e. impressions, occlusal light photo's) and these will be evaluated by the researchers. Follow up data will be gathered from X-rays already made for periodical oral examination (taking the caries risk into account). Summarizing, there is no extra load or risk for the patients. Studie design Prospective practice-based research, multicenter.

NCT ID: NCT03452358 Completed - Survival Clinical Trials

Survival Rate of Lithium Disilicate Crowns

Start date: January 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

A retrospective clinical study will be performed evaluating a large number of partial ceramic restorations (IPS e-Max press, Ivoclar, Liechtenstein) placed in general practice. Evaluation will be based on the well established Hickel criteria (Hickel et al, 2010). Rationale: IPS-e-max press has been made available to the market since 2006. Although millions of these restorations have been placed worldwide, clinical data are available of less than 200 single restorations only, covering observation periods of 2-8 years.(Guess et al, 2009; Etman en Woolford, 2010; Gehrt et al, 2012; Esquivel-Upshaw et al, 2012). Objective: Study the survival of lithium disilicate restorations during regular check-ups in a private dental practice.

NCT ID: NCT03443583 Completed - Adhesion Clinical Trials

Immediate and Delayed Dentin Sealing Effect on Partial Crowns

Start date: November 1, 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Immediate Dentin Sealing as an adjunct to adhesive cementation of all ceramic restorations is proposed and executed in several studies, but there is very limited evidence to support its effectiveness. It is presumed that IDS both reduces postoperative sensitivity and increases the bond strength to dentin as compared to DDS.