Ayah Abdellatif, Moataz Bahgat, Sayed Elmasry, K. Sultan
{"title":"Effect of Using Two Different Techniques of Denture Base Fabrication on Retention of Maxillary Complete Denture: An in Vivo Comparative Study","authors":"Ayah Abdellatif, Moataz Bahgat, Sayed Elmasry, K. Sultan","doi":"10.21608/dsu.2024.182953.1152","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Introduction: Complete denture is used to replace the entire dentition and restore mastication, speech, and aesthetics. All other tooth-supported solutions have been exhausted. Because Computer-Aided Design/ Computer-Aided Manufacturing (CAD/ CAM) dentures are milled from pre-polymerized Polymethyl Methacrylate (PMMA) blocks that do not display polymerization shrinkage, they can eliminate the laboratory processes of acrylic processing (setting up of teeth, try-in, flasking and de flasking). Aim: to compare the retention values of maxillary conventional heat-polymerized denture bases with digitally milled denture bases . Materials and Methods: Sixteen totally edentulous patients participated in the study, which was divided into two groups (n=8) (A) and (B). Patients in the group (A) received traditional heat-cured acrylic resin dentures with a long cycle water path curing procedure, in group (B) received dentures created using the CAD/CAM technique. For both groups, a metallic hook affixed to the geometric center of the maxillary dentures was pulled by a digital force-meter gauge to measure retention. Results: The mean retention values were recorded for both groups, tabulated, and statistically analyzed; the following results were obtained. Regarding group (A), retention values showed a significant increase at the beginning of the study as well as at the end of the study. Regarding group (B), retention values showed a significant initial increase at the beginning of the study, till the end of the study. A significant difference was revealed between the mean retention values of the two tested groups, with clear superiority of the retention of the CAD/CAM acrylic resin dentures (group B) than that of the conventional heat-cured acrylic resin dentures (group A). Conclusion: CAD/CAM acrylic resin dentures were superior in terms of maxillary denture retention compared to conventional heat-cured acrylic resin dentures. Retention was increased gradually over time in both two studied groups.","PeriodicalId":11270,"journal":{"name":"Dental Science Updates","volume":"112 4","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-03-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Dental Science Updates","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.21608/dsu.2024.182953.1152","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Introduction: Complete denture is used to replace the entire dentition and restore mastication, speech, and aesthetics. All other tooth-supported solutions have been exhausted. Because Computer-Aided Design/ Computer-Aided Manufacturing (CAD/ CAM) dentures are milled from pre-polymerized Polymethyl Methacrylate (PMMA) blocks that do not display polymerization shrinkage, they can eliminate the laboratory processes of acrylic processing (setting up of teeth, try-in, flasking and de flasking). Aim: to compare the retention values of maxillary conventional heat-polymerized denture bases with digitally milled denture bases . Materials and Methods: Sixteen totally edentulous patients participated in the study, which was divided into two groups (n=8) (A) and (B). Patients in the group (A) received traditional heat-cured acrylic resin dentures with a long cycle water path curing procedure, in group (B) received dentures created using the CAD/CAM technique. For both groups, a metallic hook affixed to the geometric center of the maxillary dentures was pulled by a digital force-meter gauge to measure retention. Results: The mean retention values were recorded for both groups, tabulated, and statistically analyzed; the following results were obtained. Regarding group (A), retention values showed a significant increase at the beginning of the study as well as at the end of the study. Regarding group (B), retention values showed a significant initial increase at the beginning of the study, till the end of the study. A significant difference was revealed between the mean retention values of the two tested groups, with clear superiority of the retention of the CAD/CAM acrylic resin dentures (group B) than that of the conventional heat-cured acrylic resin dentures (group A). Conclusion: CAD/CAM acrylic resin dentures were superior in terms of maxillary denture retention compared to conventional heat-cured acrylic resin dentures. Retention was increased gradually over time in both two studied groups.