» Articles » PMID: 32423551

Effect of Luting Materials, Presence of Tooth Preparation, and Functional Loading on Stress Distribution on Ceramic Laminate Veneers: A Finite Element Analysis

Overview
Journal J Prosthet Dent
Specialty Dentistry
Date 2020 May 20
PMID 32423551
Citations 6
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Statement Of Problem: How the polymerization shrinkage, loading, and mechanical properties of luting materials affect the shrinkage and functional stresses in ceramic laminate veneers (CLVs) with and without tooth preparation is unclear.

Purpose: The purpose of this finite element analysis (FEA) study was to evaluate the effect of the polymerization shrinkage, functional loading, and mechanical properties of different luting materials on the stresses in ultrathin 0.3-mm CLVs with and without tooth preparation.

Material And Methods: Three resin cements, RelyX Veneer (RV), Allcem Veneer APS (AV), Variolink Esthetic LC (VE), and 1 flowable composite resin, Tetric N-Flow (TF), were tested for post-gel shrinkage (Shr), Knoop hardness (KHN), elastic modulus (E), compressive strength (CS), and diametral tensile strength (DTS). IPS e.max CAD disks of 0.3-mm thickness were made for simulating the effects of light attenuation. Eight 2-dimensional finite element models (Marc-Mentat) of a maxillary central incisor were generated to evaluate the polymerization shrinkage stress of different materials for luting 0.3-mm CLVs with or without tooth preparation and the stress during functional loading by using a modified von Mises criterion (mvm). Collected data from Shr, KHN, and E were submitted to 2-way ANOVA and the Tukey HSD test (α=.05).

Results: Light attenuation by the 0.3-mm ceramic disk did not significantly affect the E values, but Shr was significantly lower in VE (26%) and TF (35%). TF had lower volumetric Shr (%) when interposing a ceramic disk (0.31%). Both tested tooth preparation options showed similar stress distributions from polymerization shrinkage or functional loading, with higher stress concentration on the incisal edge and also on the cervical surface. The model featuring tooth preparation and RV resin cement had the highest and VE the lowest stress levels.

Conclusions: The flowable composite resin had similar mechanical properties as the resin cements. The stress distribution from shrinkage and functional loading was similar for both techniques with or without tooth preparation.

Citing Articles

Comparative Evaluation of Microtensile Bond Strength in Three Different Dentin Luting Agents: An Study.

Castro-Ramirez L, Ladera-Castaneda M, Cachay-Criado H, Alvino-Vales M, Lopez-Gurreonero C, Cervantes-Ganoza L J Int Soc Prev Community Dent. 2024; 14(1):43-51.

PMID: 38559644 PMC: 10980309. DOI: 10.4103/jispcd.jispcd_299_21.


The Influence of a Novel, Crenelated Design of CAD-CAM Ceramic Veneers on the Debonding Strength.

Maroiu A, Jivanescu A, Serban D, Negru R, Duma V, Sinescu C Materials (Basel). 2023; 16(10).

PMID: 37241322 PMC: 10221560. DOI: 10.3390/ma16103694.


Research Progress and Clinical Application of All-Ceramic Micro-Veneer.

Ye Z, Jiang J, Yang L, Xu T, Lin Y, Luo F Materials (Basel). 2023; 16(8).

PMID: 37109791 PMC: 10141096. DOI: 10.3390/ma16082957.


Biomechanical Behavior Evaluation of Resin Cement with Different Elastic Modulus on Porcelain Laminate Veneer Restorations Using Micro-CT-Based Finite Element Analysis.

Mert Eren M, Celebi A, Icer E, Baykasoglu C, Mugan A, Yucel T Materials (Basel). 2023; 16(6).

PMID: 36984260 PMC: 10054651. DOI: 10.3390/ma16062378.


Resistance fracture of minimally prepared endocrowns made by three types of restorative materials: a 3D finite element analysis.

Meng Q, Zhang Y, Chi D, Gong Q, Tong Z J Mater Sci Mater Med. 2021; 32(11):137.

PMID: 34716807 PMC: 8557147. DOI: 10.1007/s10856-021-06610-x.