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Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanical properties of resin-ceramic CAD/CAM restorative materials

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TLDR
The new-generation polymer-based materials tested in this study exhibited significantly higher flexural strength and modulus of resilience, along with lower flexural modulus values compared with the tested ceramic or hybrid materials.
Abstract
Statement of problem The recent development of polymer-based computer-aided design and computer-aided manufactured (CAD/CAM) milling blocks and the limited availability of independent studies on these materials make it pertinent to evaluate their properties and identify potential strengths and limitations. Purpose The purpose of this in vitro study was to determine and compare mechanical properties (flexural strength, flexural modulus, modulus of resilience) and compare the margin edge quality of recently introduced polymer-based CAD/CAM materials with some of their commercially available composite resin and ceramic counterparts. Material and methods The materials studied were Lava Ultimate Restorative (LVU; 3M ESPE), Enamic (ENA; Vita Zahnfabrik), Cerasmart (CES; GC Dental Products), IPS Empress CAD (EMP; Ivoclar Vivadent AG), Vitablocs Mark II (VM2; Vita Zahnfabrik), and Paradigm MZ100 Block (MZ1; 3M ESPE). Polished 4×1×13.5 mm bars (n=25) were prepared from standard-sized milling blocks of each tested material. The bars were subjected to a 3-point flexural test on a 10-mm span with a crosshead speed of 0.5 mm/min. In addition, 42 conventional monolithic crowns (7 per material) were milled. Margin edge quality was observed by means of macrophotography and optical microscopy, providing a qualitative visual assessment and a measurement of existing roughness. The results were analyzed by ANOVA followed by the Tukey HSD test (α=.05). Results The mean flexural strength of the tested materials ranged from 105 ±9 MPa (VM2) to 219 ±20 MPa (CES). The mean flexural modulus ranged from 8 ±0.25 GPa (CES) to 32 ±1.9 GPa (EMP). The mean modulus of resilience ranged from 0.21 ±0.02 MPa (VM2) to 3.07 ±0.45 MPa (CES). The qualitative assessment of margin edge roughness revealed visible differences among the tested materials, with mean roughness measurements ranging from 60 ±16 μm (CES) to 190 ±15 μm (EMP). The material factor had a significant effect on the mean flexural strength ( P P P P Conclusions The new-generation polymer-based materials tested in this study exhibited significantly higher flexural strength and modulus of resilience, along with lower flexural modulus values compared with the tested ceramic or hybrid materials. Crowns milled from the new resin-based blocks seemed to exhibit visibly smoother margins compared with the ceramic materials studied.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Wear, strength, modulus and hardness of CAD/CAM restorative materials

TL;DR: Resin composite and resin infiltrated ceramic materials have demonstrated adequate wear resistance for load bearing restorations, however, they will require at least similar material thickness as lithium disilicate restorATIONS due to their strength.
Journal ArticleDOI

From Artisanal to CAD-CAM Blocks: State of the Art of Indirect Composites.

TL;DR: This critical state-of-the-art review analyzes the strengths and weaknesses of the different varieties of CAD-CAM composite materials, especially as compared with direct and artisanal indirect composites and suggests manufacturers should provide more complete information regarding their product polymerization process, microstructure, and composition.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanical properties and internal fit of 4 CAD-CAM block materials

TL;DR: The mechanical properties of the CAD‐CAM block materials tested were within the acceptable range for fabrication of single restorations according to the ISO standard for ceramics (ISO 6872:2008).
Journal ArticleDOI

Bonding Effectiveness of Luting Composites to Different CAD/CAM Materials.

TL;DR: The bond strength of luting composites to novel CAD/CAM materials is influenced by surface treatment, with the highest bond strengths obtained with HF, S, HF+S and Lava Ultimate.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Current State of Chairside Digital Dentistry and Materials.

TL;DR: The material range available for chairside digital dentistry is broad and includes polymethyl methacrylates, composite resins, and a large variety of ceramics.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Digital dentistry: an overview of recent developments for CAD/CAM generated restorations

TL;DR: An overview of CAD/CAM-technologies and systems available for dentistry today is given, which enable the access to new, almost defect-free, industrially prefabricated and controlled materials and an improvement in precision and planning, as well as an increase in efficiency.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanical properties of polymer-infiltrated-ceramic-network materials

TL;DR: SEM observations of the indentation induced cracks indicate that the polymer network causes greater crack deflection than the dense ceramic material, pointing out the correlation between ceramic network density, elastic modulus and hardness of PICNs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanical properties and wear behavior of light-cured packable composite resins

TL;DR: It is suggested that fracture and wear behavior of the composite resins are highly influenced by the filler system.
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Influence of Test Method on Failure Stress of Brittle Dental Materials

TL;DR: The results demonstrate that the strength of zinc phosphate cement depends not only upon the geometric factors, but also upon sample preparation conditions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Materials for chairside CAD/CAM–produced restorations

TL;DR: Examination of the structure, properties and clinical results of CAD/CAM materials supports their use in routine dental practice, and full-contour ceramic restorations fabricated chair-side may reinforce the tooth, providing good long-term clinical success.
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