Class IV preparations
For fractured anterior teeth restored with composite resin restorations.
Source
Department of Pediatric Dentistry, Tufts University School of Dental Medicine, 1 Kneeland Street, Boston, MA 02111, USA.Abstract
Pediatric
dentists play a major role in treating most of the anterior teeth
fractures due to the fact that most patients who suffer such traumatic
injuries are between the ages of seven and fourteen. Several techniques
has been developed to restore the fractured incisors to the original
shape and color, these include full-coverage of the traumatized tooth,
or restoring the incisors with a resin. The purpose of this study is to
find the ideal combination of tooth preparation and restorative
material, namely, to determine if stair step chamfer preparations
provide more retention in class IV restorations than the plain chamfer
preparation technique when restored with a combination of a hybrid
composite resin and a microfilled composite resin. This was done by
comparing the shear strength values between the buccal stair-step
chamfer preparation, and a modification on it (buccal and lingual
stair-step chamfer preparation) and the plain chamfer preparation
techniques in class IV restorations on anterior incisors using different
composite resin materials. The Instron machine was used to test shear
strength. One hundred and two bovine incisor teeth were freshly
harvested from the slaughterhouse. The teeth were prepared and restored
according to the following six groups; Plain Chamfer preparation with
Tetric Ceram Composite, Plain Chamfer preparation with Renamel
Composite, buccal stair-step chamfer preparation with Tetric Ceram
composite, buccal stair-step chamfer preparation with Renamel composite,
Buccal and lingual stair-step preparation with Tetric Ceram Composite,
Buccal and lingual stair-step chamfer preparation with renamel
composite. All samples were fractured using the Instron testing machine
then the surface area were measured using Image-J software. Shear
strength for every sample was calculated using the load numeric result
from the Instron machine and the measured surface area. The
Two-Factorial (AB) Analysis of Variance For Independent Samples showed
that the buccal stair-step chamfer preparation showed significantly
higher shear strength and fracture resistance than plain chamfer or the
buccal and lingual stair-step chamfer preparation. The combination of
Renamel Hybrid and Renamel Microfill composite materials showed better
results than the Tetric Ceram composite when used with all three
preparation techniques, but did not show a statistical significance. It
was concluded that buccal stair-step preparation technique provided the
ideal preparation technique with bonded composite resins in fractured
anterior teeth. Only 7% of the entire sample size had an adhesion
failure versus 93% that had cohesion failure. There was no significant
difference in shear strength, between the restorative materials used, in
conjunction with all the preparation techniques.
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