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Tooth Wear clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT02289781 Active, not recruiting - Tooth Wear Clinical Trials

Wear of Enamel Against Polished Zirconia Crowns

Start date: April 2013
Phase:
Study type: Observational

A randomized, controlled clinical trial is designed to analyze the wear of enamel by opposing polished monolithic zirconia crowns and by the polished veneer surfaces of metal-ceramic crowns. This single-blind pilot study will involve a total of 30 teeth that require full coverage crowns that oppose natural antagonist teeth. The objectives of this research are to test the following hypotheses: (1) differences between mean wear of antagonist enamel by polished monolithic zirconia crowns and by the polished veneer surface of metal-ceramic crowns are statistically significant; (2) differences between mean wear of antagonist enamel by opposing polished monolithic zirconia crowns and enamel by opposing enamel are statistically significant; and (3) differences between mean antagonist wear of enamel by opposing polished veneer surfaces of metal-ceramic crowns and enamel by opposing enamel are statistically significant.

NCT ID: NCT00223405 Completed - Tooth Wear Clinical Trials

Analysis of Enamel Wear Against Ceramic Restorations

Start date: April 2003
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Observational

1. To characterize the microstructure (fracture toughness, particle size of ceramic, and inter-particle spacing) of three ceramic materials 2. To test the hypothesis that lower fracture toughness of glass and/or crystal phase in ceramics reduce wear damage of enamel. 3. To test the hypothesis that smaller sized crystals reduce wear damage of enamel. 4. To test the hypothesis that larger inter-particle spacing reduces wear damage of enamel. 5. To test the hypothesis that equivalent wear patterns exist in all directions between enamel versus enamel and ceramic versus enamel. 6. To test the hypothesis that bite force does not correlate with wear rates. 7. To test the hypothesis that salivary flow does not correlate with wear rates. 8. To test the hypothesis that a greater amount of wear is not associated with a loss in vertical dimension of occlusion. 9. To test the hypothesis that a greater amount of wear does not correlate with secondary cementum deposition as part of the passive eruption process. 10. To test the hypothesis that maximum wear occurs early and wear rates level off within the first two years. 11. To test the hypothesis that in vitro wear analysis does not correlate with in vivo wear measurements