Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3146421 Journal of Dentistry 2008 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

SummaryObjectivesThe aim of this study was to determine the relative contribution of changes in restorative material, cavity dimensions, adhesive layer adaptation, and load conditions on the biomechanical response of an adhesive Class II MOD restoration during oral temperature changes.MethodsA validated finite-element (FE) model was used to perform the structural–thermal coupled field analyses and the Taguchi method was employed to identify the significance of each design factor in controlling the stress.ResultsThe results indicated that thermal expansion in restorative material amplified the thermal effect and dominated the tooth stress value (69%) at high temperatures. The percentage contributions of the load conditions, cavity depth, and cement modulus increased the effect on tooth stress values 46%, 32%, and 14%, respectively, when the tooth temperature was returned to 37 °C. Load conditions were also the main factor influencing the resin cement stress values, irrespective of temperature changes. Increased stress values occurred with composite resin, lateral force, a deeper cavity, and a higher luting cement modulus.ConclusionsThe combined use of FE analysis and the Taguchi method efficiently identified that a deeper cavity might increase the risk of a restored tooth fracture, as well as a ceramic inlay with a lower thermal expansion, attaining a proper occlusal adjustment to reduce the lateral occlusal force and low modulus luting material application to obtain a better force-transmission mechanism are recommended.

Related Topics
Health Sciences Medicine and Dentistry Dentistry, Oral Surgery and Medicine
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