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  3. Ceramic and Composite Polishing Systems for Milled Lithium Disilicate Restorative Materials: A 2D and 3D Comparative In Vitro Study.
 

Ceramic and Composite Polishing Systems for Milled Lithium Disilicate Restorative Materials: A 2D and 3D Comparative In Vitro Study.

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BORIS DOI
10.48350/171958
Date of Publication
August 5, 2022
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Zahnmedizinische Klin...

Contributor
Jurado, Carlos A
Amarillas-Gastelum, Clarisa
Afrashtehfar, Kelvin Ian
Zahnmedizinische Kliniken, Klinik für Rekonstruktive Zahnmedizin und Gerodontologie
Argueta-Figueroa, Liliana
Fischer, Nicholas G
Alshabib, Abdulrahman
Series
Materials
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
1996-1944
Publisher
MDPI
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.3390/ma15155402
PubMed ID
35955341
Uncontrolled Keywords

CAD-CAM dental polish...

Description
Purpose: This study aims to evaluate the effectiveness of two ceramic and two composite polishing systems for a novel chairside computer-aided design/computer-aided manufacturing (CAD/CAM) lithium disilicate ceramic with three-dimensional and two-dimensional microscopy images. This ceramic material can be used for implant-supported or tooth-borne single-unit prostheses. Materials and Methods: Sixty flat samples of novel chairside CAD/CAM reinforced lithium disilicate ceramic (Amber Mill, Hass Bio) were divided into five groups (n = 15/group) and treated as follows: Group 1 (NoP), no polished treatment; group 2 (CeDi), polished with ceramic Dialite LD (Brasseler USA); group 3, (CeOp) polished with ceramic OptraFine (Ivoclar Vivadent); group 4, (CoDi) polished with composite DiaComp (Brasseler USA), and group 5 (CoAs), polished with composite Astropol (Ivoclar Vivadent). The polished ceramic surface topography was observed and measured with three-dimensional and two-dimensional images. Results: All polishing systems significantly reduced the surface roughness compared with the non-polished control group (Sa 1.15 μm). Group 2 (CeDi) provided the smoothest surface arithmetical mean eight with 0.32 μm, followed by group 3 (CeOp) with 0.34 μm. Group 5 (CoAs) with 0.52 μm provided the smoothest surface among the composite polishing kits. Group 4 (CoDi) with 0.66 μm provided the least smooth surface among all polishing systems tested. Conclusions: Despite the effectiveness of ceramic polishing systems being superior to composite polishing systems of the CAD/CAM lithium disilicate restorative material, both polishing systems significantly improved the smoothness.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/86682
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materials-15-05402.pdftextAdobe PDF3.14 MBpublishedOpen
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