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Stress distribution on different bar materials in implant-retained palatal obturator

Implant-retained custom-milled framework enhances the stability of palatal obturator prostheses. Therefore, to evaluate the mechanical response of implant-retained obturator prostheses with bar-clip attachment and milled bars, in three different materials under two load incidences were simulated. A...

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Autores principales: Villefort, Regina Furbino, Tribst, João Paulo Mendes, Dal Piva, Amanda Maria de Oliveira, Borges, Alexandre Luiz, Binda, Nívia Castro, Ferreira, Carlos Eduardo de Almeida, Bottino, Marco Antonio, von Zeidler, Sandra Lúcia Ventorim
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7598468/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33125441
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0241589
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author Villefort, Regina Furbino
Tribst, João Paulo Mendes
Dal Piva, Amanda Maria de Oliveira
Borges, Alexandre Luiz
Binda, Nívia Castro
Ferreira, Carlos Eduardo de Almeida
Bottino, Marco Antonio
von Zeidler, Sandra Lúcia Ventorim
author_facet Villefort, Regina Furbino
Tribst, João Paulo Mendes
Dal Piva, Amanda Maria de Oliveira
Borges, Alexandre Luiz
Binda, Nívia Castro
Ferreira, Carlos Eduardo de Almeida
Bottino, Marco Antonio
von Zeidler, Sandra Lúcia Ventorim
author_sort Villefort, Regina Furbino
collection PubMed
description Implant-retained custom-milled framework enhances the stability of palatal obturator prostheses. Therefore, to evaluate the mechanical response of implant-retained obturator prostheses with bar-clip attachment and milled bars, in three different materials under two load incidences were simulated. A maxilla model which Type IIb maxillary defect received five external hexagon implants (4.1 x 10 mm). An implant-supported palatal obturator prosthesis was simulated in three different materials: polyetheretherketone (PEEK), titanium (Ti:90%, Al:6%, V:4%) and Co-Cr (Co:60.6%, Cr:31.5%, Mo:6%) alloys. The model was imported into the analysis software and divided into a mesh composed of nodes and tetrahedral elements. Each material was assumed isotropic, elastic and homogeneous and all contacts were considered ideal. The bone was fixed and the load was applied in two different regions for each material: at the palatal face (cingulum area) of the central incisors (100 N magnitude at 45°); and at the occlusal surface of the first left molar (150 N magnitude normal to the surface). The microstrain and von-Mises stress were selected as criteria for analysis. The posterior load showed a higher strain concentration in the posterior peri-implant tissue, near the load application side for cortical and cancellous bone, regardless the simulated material. The anterior load showed a lower strain concentration with reduced magnitude and more implants involving in the load dissipation. The stress peak was calculated during posterior loading, which 77.7 MPa in the prosthetic screws and 2,686 με microstrain in the cortical bone. For bone tissue and bar, the material stiffness was inversely proportional to the calculated microstrain and stress. However, for the prosthetic screws and implants the PEEK showed higher stress concentration than the other materials. PEEK showed a promising behavior for the bone tissue and for the integrity of the bar and bar-clip attachments. However, the stress concentration in the prosthetic screws may represent an increase in failure risk. The use of Co-Cr alloy can reduce the stress in the prosthetic screw; however, it increases the bone strain; while the Titanium showed an intermediate behavior.
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spelling pubmed-75984682020-11-03 Stress distribution on different bar materials in implant-retained palatal obturator Villefort, Regina Furbino Tribst, João Paulo Mendes Dal Piva, Amanda Maria de Oliveira Borges, Alexandre Luiz Binda, Nívia Castro Ferreira, Carlos Eduardo de Almeida Bottino, Marco Antonio von Zeidler, Sandra Lúcia Ventorim PLoS One Research Article Implant-retained custom-milled framework enhances the stability of palatal obturator prostheses. Therefore, to evaluate the mechanical response of implant-retained obturator prostheses with bar-clip attachment and milled bars, in three different materials under two load incidences were simulated. A maxilla model which Type IIb maxillary defect received five external hexagon implants (4.1 x 10 mm). An implant-supported palatal obturator prosthesis was simulated in three different materials: polyetheretherketone (PEEK), titanium (Ti:90%, Al:6%, V:4%) and Co-Cr (Co:60.6%, Cr:31.5%, Mo:6%) alloys. The model was imported into the analysis software and divided into a mesh composed of nodes and tetrahedral elements. Each material was assumed isotropic, elastic and homogeneous and all contacts were considered ideal. The bone was fixed and the load was applied in two different regions for each material: at the palatal face (cingulum area) of the central incisors (100 N magnitude at 45°); and at the occlusal surface of the first left molar (150 N magnitude normal to the surface). The microstrain and von-Mises stress were selected as criteria for analysis. The posterior load showed a higher strain concentration in the posterior peri-implant tissue, near the load application side for cortical and cancellous bone, regardless the simulated material. The anterior load showed a lower strain concentration with reduced magnitude and more implants involving in the load dissipation. The stress peak was calculated during posterior loading, which 77.7 MPa in the prosthetic screws and 2,686 με microstrain in the cortical bone. For bone tissue and bar, the material stiffness was inversely proportional to the calculated microstrain and stress. However, for the prosthetic screws and implants the PEEK showed higher stress concentration than the other materials. PEEK showed a promising behavior for the bone tissue and for the integrity of the bar and bar-clip attachments. However, the stress concentration in the prosthetic screws may represent an increase in failure risk. The use of Co-Cr alloy can reduce the stress in the prosthetic screw; however, it increases the bone strain; while the Titanium showed an intermediate behavior. Public Library of Science 2020-10-30 /pmc/articles/PMC7598468/ /pubmed/33125441 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0241589 Text en © 2020 Villefort et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Villefort, Regina Furbino
Tribst, João Paulo Mendes
Dal Piva, Amanda Maria de Oliveira
Borges, Alexandre Luiz
Binda, Nívia Castro
Ferreira, Carlos Eduardo de Almeida
Bottino, Marco Antonio
von Zeidler, Sandra Lúcia Ventorim
Stress distribution on different bar materials in implant-retained palatal obturator
title Stress distribution on different bar materials in implant-retained palatal obturator
title_full Stress distribution on different bar materials in implant-retained palatal obturator
title_fullStr Stress distribution on different bar materials in implant-retained palatal obturator
title_full_unstemmed Stress distribution on different bar materials in implant-retained palatal obturator
title_short Stress distribution on different bar materials in implant-retained palatal obturator
title_sort stress distribution on different bar materials in implant-retained palatal obturator
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7598468/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33125441
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0241589
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