34 resultados para Inlays
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O objetivo é comparar o ajuste interno e marginal cervical de dois sistemas de compósito e um de cerâmica prensada. O Material e Métodos foi elaborado a partir de um modelo mestre metálico com preparo para inlay MOD, 15 troquéis de gesso tipo IV foram obtidos e distribuídos randomicamente em três grupos (n=5), a saber: Grupo Empress, Grupo Sinfony e Grupo Z350. Após a confecção das restaurações, cada peça foi posicionada no modelo mestre e fotografada nas faces mesial e distal para através de um programa de computador fazer a análise da desadaptação marginal cervical. Depois, a peça foi cimentada no modelo mestre usando silicone de adição de ultrabaixa viscosidade para preencher o espaço entre as restaurações e o preparo. Após a remoção das inlays, cada réplica foi pesada em balança de precisão para posterior obtenção de seu volume. Nos Resultados temos a interface paredes do preparo/paredes da restauração: houve diferença estatística entre o grupo Empress, que apresentou volume até 137% maior que os demais grupos, que foram considerados iguais entre si. Área de desadaptação marginal cervical: Houve diferença entre todos os grupos com o grupo Empress apresentando os maiores valores, seguido pelo grupo Sinfony e pelo grupo Z350. Os grupos Empress e o Sinfony apresentaram respectivamente áreas de desadaptação 450% e 200% maiores que o grupo Z350. Maior distância entre as bordas da restauração e as margens do preparo os grupos Empress e Sinfony foram iguais estatisticamente e diferentes do grupo Z350 que apresentou os menores valores. Entretanto, o grupo Empress apresentou uma desadaptação linear 43% maior que o grupo Sinfony. Concluímos que quanto ao desajuste interno, o grupo Empress apresentou os maiores valores no volume da interface dente/restauração, com diferença estatística significativa (P<0,05) em relação aos demais grupos. Para o cálculo da área, a desadaptação marginal foi menor no grupo Z350, seguido dos grupos Sinfony e Empress, todos mostrando diferença estatística significativa entre si (P<0,05). Considerando a medida linear, a desadaptação marginal foi menor no grupo Z350, indicando diferença estatística significativa (P<0,05) deste para os demais grupos.
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Objectives: To evaluate the hypothesis that a process of hydrofluoric acid precipitate neutralization and fatigue load cycling performed on human premolars restored with ceramic inlays had an influence on microtensile bond strength results (MTBS). Methods: MOD inlay preparations were performed in 40 premolars (with their roots embedded in acrylic resin). Forty ceramic restorations were prepared using glass-ceramic (IPS Empress). The inner surfaces of all the restorations were etched with 10% hydrofluoric acid for 60 seconds, rinsed with water and dried. The specimens were divided into two groups (N=20): 1-without neutralization; 2-with neutralization. All the restorations were silanized and adhesively cemented (self-curing and self-etching luting composite system, Multilink). Ten premolars from each group were submitted to mechanical cycling (1,400,000 cycles, 50N, 37 degrees C). After cycling, the samples were sectioned to produce non-trimmed beam specimens (vestibular dentin-restoration-lingual dentin set), which were submitted to microtensile testing. Results: Bond strength was significantly affected by the surface treatment (p<0.0001) (no neutralization > neutralization) and mechanical cycling (p<0.0001) (control > cycling) (2-way ANOVA and Tukey test, alpha=.05). Conclusion: Hydrofluoric acid precipitate neutralization appears to significantly damage the resin bond to glass-ceramic and should not be recommended. The clinical simulation of the specimens, by using mechanical cycling, is important when evaluating the ceramic-dentin bond.
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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)
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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)
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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)
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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)
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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)
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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)
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Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)
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The aim of this study was to evaluate the internal fit, marginal adaptation, and bond strengths of inlays made of computer-aided design/computer-aided manufacturing feldspathic ceramic and polymer-infiltrated ceramic. Twenty molars were randomly selected and prepared to receive inlays that were milled from both materials. Before cementation, internal fit was achieved using the replica technique by molding the internal surface with addition silicone and measuring the cement thicknesses of the pulpal and axial walls. Marginal adaptation was measured on the occlusal and proximal margins of the replica. The inlays were then cemented using resin cement (Panavia F2.0) and subjected to two million thermomechanical cycles in water (200 N load and 3.8-Hz frequency). The restored teeth were then cut into beams, using a lathe, for microtensile testing. The contact angles, marginal integrity, and surface patterns after etching were also observed. Statistical analysis was performed using two-way repeated measures analysis of variance (p<0.05), the Tukey test for internal fit and marginal adaptation, and the Student t-test for bond strength. The failure types (adhesive or cohesive) were classified on each fractured beam. The results showed that the misfit of the pulpal walls (p=0.0002) and the marginal adaptation (p=0.0001) of the feldspathic ceramic were significantly higher when compared to those of the polymer-infiltrated ceramic, while the bond strength values of the former were higher when compared to those of the latter. The contact angle of the polymer-infiltrated ceramic was also higher. In the present study, the hybrid ceramic presented improved internal and marginal adaptation, but the bond strengths were higher for the feldspathic ceramic.
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This study evaluated the five-year clinical performance of ceramic inlays and onlays made with two systems: sintered Duceram (Dentsply-Degussa) and pressable IPS Empress (Ivoclar Vivadent). Eighty-six restorations were placed by a single operator in 35 patients with a median age of 33 years. The restorations were cemented with dual-cured resin cement (Variolink II, Ivoclar Vivadent) and Syntac Classic adhesive under rubber dam. The evaluations were conducted by two independent investigators at baseline, and at one, two, three, and five years using the modified United States Public Health Service (USPHS) criteria. At the five-year recall, 26 patients were evaluated (74.28%), totalling 62 (72.09%) restorations. Four IPS restorations were fractured, two restorations presented secondary caries (one from IPS and one from Duceram), and two restorations showed unacceptable defects at the restoration margin and needed replacement (one restoration from each ceramic system). A general success rate of 87% was recorded. The Fisher exact test revealed no significant difference between Duceram and IPS Empress ceramic systems for all aspects evaluated at different recall appointments (p>0.05). The McNemar chi-square test showed significant differences in relation to marginal discoloration, marginal integrity, and surface texture between the baseline and five-year recall for both systems (p<0.001), with an increased percentage of Bravo scores. However, few Charlie or Delta scores were attributed to these restorations. In conclusion, these two types of ceramic materials demonstrated acceptable clinical performance after five years
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"February 1993."
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Purpose To explore the effect of small-aperture optics, designed to aid presbyopes by increasing ocular depth-of-focus, on measurements of the visual field. Methods Simple theoretical and ray-tracing models were used to predict the impact of different designs of small-aperture contact lenses or corneal inlays on the proportion of light passing through natural pupils of various diameters as a function of the direction in the visual field. The left eyes of five healthy volunteers were tested using three afocal, hand-painted opaque soft contact lenses (www.davidthomas.com). Two were opaque over a 10 mm diameter but had central clear circular apertures of 1.5 and 3.0 mm in diameter. The third had an annular opaque zone with inner and outer diameters of 1.5 and 4.0 mm, approximately simulating the geometry of the KAMRA inlay (www.acufocus.com). A fourth, clear lens was used for comparison purposes. Visual fields along the horizontal meridian were evaluated up to 50° eccentricity with static automated perimetry (Medmont M700, stimulus Goldmann-size III; www.medmont.com). Results According to ray-tracing, the two lenses with the circular apertures were expected to reduce the relative transmittance of the pupil to zero at specific field angles (around 60° for the conditions of the experimental measurements). In contrast, the annular stop had no effect on the absolute field but relative transmittance was reduced over the central area of the field, the exact effects depending upon the natural pupil diameter. Experimental results broadly agreed with these theoretical expectations. With the 1.5 and 3.0 mm pupils, only minor losses in sensitivity (around 2 dB) in comparison with the clear-lens case occurred across the central 10° radius of field. Beyond this angle, sensitivity losses increased, to reach about 7 dB at the edge of the measured field (50°). The field results with the annular stop showed at most only a slight loss in sensitivity (≤3 dB) across the measured field. Conclusion The present theoretical and experimental results support earlier clinical findings that KAMRA-type annular stops, unlike circular artificial pupils, have only minor effects on measurements of the visual field.
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In recent years there has seen an increased interest in refractive surgery for the correction of presbyopia. This can be attributed to a number of factors such as the increased demand from patients to have perfect vision without the need for glasses, spurred on by the success of high street refractive laser surgery. Also the World Health Organisation (WHO) estimated in 2005 that over a 1.04 billion people worldwide are affected by presbyopia (Holden et al. 2008). This vast number of people is valued as a potential market and is a huge enticement to the ophthalmic industry to try and develop devices and products to treat this condition. Recent advances in technology have renewed interest in the implantation of corneal inlays for surgical treatment of presbyopia. Dexl et al. (2011) suggest that the reason for this is the further development of biomaterial technology, advances in femtosecond laser and the need for a reversible presbyopic treatment.