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Publication:
Effect of resin cement space on the fatigue behavior of bonded CAD/CAM leucite ceramic crowns

Abstract

This study evaluated the influence of occlusal resin cement space on the fatigue performance of bonded-leucite crowns to a dentin-analogue material. Leucite anatomical crowns were adhesively cemented to dentin-like preparations having distinct occlusal cement space (50, 100 and 300 μm) (n = 18), and subjected to step-stress fatigue testing (150 N – 350 N; step-size: 25 N; 20,000 cycles/step; 20 Hz). Fatigue data (load and number of cycles for failure) were analyzed using Kaplan–Meier and Mantel–Cox (log-rank) tests (p <0.05). Fractographic analysis and occlusal internal space measurements were also performed. There was no significant difference for the distinct occlusal cement layer (50 μm: 289 N, 136,111 cycles; 100 μm: 285 N, 132,778 cycles; 300 μm: 246 N, 101,667 cycles). Occlusal internal space analysis showed a mean thickness of 120.4 (50 μm), 174.9 (100 μm) and 337.2 (300 μm). All failures were radial cracks originating at the ceramic-cement interface. Distinct occlusal cement spaces had no effect on the fatigue behavior of anatomical leucite crowns.

Description

Keywords

Cement thickness, Fatigue test, IPS Empress CAD, Radial crack, Survival probability

Language

English

Citation

Journal of the Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials, v. 110.

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