Effect of the infrastructure material on the failure behavior of prosthetic crowns

Dent Mater. 2014 May;30(5):578-85. doi: 10.1016/j.dental.2014.02.016. Epub 2014 Mar 21.

Abstract

Objectives: To evaluate the effect of infrastructure (IS) material on the fracture behavior of prosthetic crowns.

Methods: Restorations were fabricated using a metal die simulating a prepared tooth. Four groups were evaluated: YZ-C, Y-TZP (In-Ceram YZ, Vita) IS produced by CAD-CAM; IZ-C, In-Ceram Zirconia (Vita) IS produced by CAD-CAM; IZ-S, In-Ceram Zirconia (Vita) IS produced by slip-cast; MC, metal IS (control). The IS were veneered with porcelain and resin cemented to fiber-reinforced composite dies. Specimens were loaded in compression to failure using a universal testing machine. The 30° angle load was applied by a spherical piston, in 37°C distilled water. Fractography was performed using stereomicroscope and SEM. Data were statistically analyzed with Anova and Student-Newman-Keuls tests (α=0.05).

Results: Significant differences were found between groups (p=0.022). MC showed the highest mean failure load, statistically similar to YZ-C. There was no statistical difference between YZ-C, IZ-C and IZ-S. MC and YZ-C showed no catastrophic failure. IZ-C and IZ-S showed chipping and catastrophic failures. The fracture behavior is similar to reported clinical failures.

Significance: Considering the ceramic systems evaluated, YZ-C and MC crowns present greater fracture load and a more favorable failure mode than In-Ceram Zirconia crowns, regardless of the fabrication type (CAD-CAM or slip-cast).

Keywords: Ceramics; Dental materials; Dental restoration failure.; Stress, Mechanical.

MeSH terms

  • Crowns*
  • Dental Materials*
  • Dental Restoration Failure*

Substances

  • Dental Materials