J Adv Prosthodont.  2024 Feb;16(1):57-65. 10.4047/jap.2024.16.1.57.

Clinical comparison of marginal fit of ceramic inlays between digital and conventional impressions

Affiliations
  • 1Prosthodontics Department, School of Dentistry, University of Granada, Granada, Spain
  • 2Private practice, Granada, Spain
  • 3Applied Physics Department, School of Sciences, University of Granada, Granada, Spain
  • 4Oral Health and Preventive Dentistry Department, School of Dentistry, University of Granada, Granada, Spain

Abstract

PURPOSE
The aim of this stuldy was to compare the clinical marginal fit of CAD-CAM inlays obtained from intraoral digital impression or addition silicone impression techniques.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
The study included 31 inlays for prosthodontics purposes of 31 patients: 15 based on intraoral digital impressions (DI group); and 16 based on a conventional impression technique (CI group). Inlays included occlusal and a non-occlusal surface. Inlays were milled in ceramic. The inlay-teeth interface was replicated by placing each inlay in its corresponding uncemented clinical preparation and taking interface impressions with silicone material from occlusal and free surfaces. Interface analysis was made using white light confocal microscopy (WLCM) (scanning area: 694 × 510 µm2) from the impression samples. The gap size and the inlay overextension were measured from the microscopy topographies. For analytical purposes (i.e., 95-%-confidence intervals calculations and P-value calculations), the procedure REGRESS in SUDAAN was used to account for clustering (i.e., multiple measurements). For p-value calculation, the log transformation of the dependent variables was used to normalize the distributions.
RESULTS
Marginal fit values for occlusal and free surfaces were affected by the type of impression. There were no differences between surfaces (occlusal vs. free). Gap obtained for DI group was 164 ± 84 µm and that for CI group was 209 ± 104 µm, and there were statistical differences between them (p = .041). Mean overextension values were 60 ± 59 µm for DI group and 67 ± 73 µm for CI group, and there were no differences between then (p = .553).
CONCLUSION
Digital impression achieved inlays with higher clinical marginal fit and performed better than the conventional silicone materials.

Keyword

Prosthodontics; Dental inlay; Dental marginal adaptation; Randomized clinical trial
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