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  3. Comparative Influence of Marginal Design and Digital Scanning Accuracy on the Clinical Longevity of Ceramic Restorations: An Evidence-Based Approach. Consensus Statement From SSRD, SEPES, and PROSEC Conference on Minimally Invasive Restorations.
 

Comparative Influence of Marginal Design and Digital Scanning Accuracy on the Clinical Longevity of Ceramic Restorations: An Evidence-Based Approach. Consensus Statement From SSRD, SEPES, and PROSEC Conference on Minimally Invasive Restorations.

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BORIS DOI
10.48620/87529
Publisher DOI
10.1111/jerd.13474
PubMed ID
40186389
Description
Objectives
This consensus paper aims to evaluate the impact of vertical and horizontal finishing lines on the survival, success, and periodontal outcomes of veneer, crown, and fixed partial denture (FPD) restorations, as well as the accuracy of intraoral scanner (IOS) systems in fabricating inlay, onlay, and veneer restorations.
Material And Methods
Two systematic reviews with meta-analyses were conducted following PRISMA guidelines. The first review analyzed 15 studies comparing vertical and horizontal finishing lines. The second review included 33 studies on IOS accuracy for inlays, onlays, and veneers. Key findings, clinical recommendations, and unanswered research questions were synthesized into consensus statements.
Results
Vertical and horizontal finish lines demonstrated no significant differences in restoration survival, success rates (65%-100%), or periodontal outcomes over 3-7 years. However, vertical designs were deemed technique-sensitive. IOSs reliably fabricated single-unit inlay and onlay restorations with high accuracy, but data on veneer restorations remained inconclusive due to limited studies.
Conclusions
Both finishing line designs are clinically viable, with material selection and planning being critical. IOSs offer reliable alternatives to conventional methods for inlays and onlays but require further evaluation for veneers. Future research should address clinical selection criteria, esthetic parameters, and patient-reported outcomes to refine restorative protocols.
Date of Publication
2025-03
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
600 Technology > 610 Medicine & health
Keyword(s)
crown
•
horizontal preparation
•
inlay
•
intraoral scanner
•
onlay
•
veneer
•
vertical preparation
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Pradies, Guillermo
Gil, Alfonso
Morón-Conejo, Belén
Bonfanti-Gris, Mónica
Martínez-Rus, Francisco
Pérez-Barquero, Jorge Alonso
Barmak, Abdul Basir
Agustín-Panadero, Rubén
Fernández-Estevan, Lucía
Gómez-Polo, Miguel
Lopez-Fernandez, Iria
Soetebeer, Maren
Pizzi, Peter
Mao, Zhen
Spies, Benedikt C
Paravina, Rade
Molinero-Mourelle, Pedro
School of Dental Medicine, Department of Reconstructive Dentistry and Gerodontology
Abou-Ayash, Samir
School of Dental Medicine, Department of Reconstructive Dentistry and Gerodontology
Joda, Tim
Burkhardt, Felix
Revilla-Leon, Marta
Additional Credits
School of Dental Medicine, Department of Reconstructive Dentistry and Gerodontology
Series
Journal of Esthetic and Restorative Dentistry
Publisher
Wiley
ISSN
1708-8240
1496-4155
Access(Rights)
restricted
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