bridgework design and materials Flashcards

1
Q

What is the success rate of a resin bonded cantilever bridge?

A

80% over 5 years

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2
Q

What is the success rate of a fixed-fixed resin bonded bridge?

A

90% over 5 years

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3
Q

What occlusal information is needed before a bridge is placed?

A

Find incisal class
Whether canine guidance or group function
Are teeth overerupted
Will bridge interfere with current occlusion
Are there signs of parafunction

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4
Q

What needs to be thought about when designing and planning for a bridge?

A

Will the bridge require prep - none, minimal or conventional
What material to use
Evaluate abutments
Cleansability
Appearance

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5
Q

Name 4 parts about abutment teeth that should be evaluated?

A

Any from :
- root configuration
- angulation or rotation of tooth
- periodontal status
- surface area for bonding
- quality of enamel
- risk of pulpal damage
- remaining tooth structure present
- quality of any endodontic treatment

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6
Q

What are the stages of bridge design?

A
  1. Select abutment teeth
  2. Select retainer
  3. Select pontic and connector
  4. Plan the occlusion
  5. Prescribe the material
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7
Q

What are the different types of pontic?

A
  1. Wash-through pontic
  2. Dome pontic (bullet shaped or torpedo shaped)
  3. Modified ridge-lap pontic
  4. Ridge lap pontic (full saddle pontic)
  5. Ovate pontic
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8
Q

What are the functions of a pontic?

A

Restore appearance of missing tooth
Stabilise the occlusion
Improve masticatory function

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9
Q

What should be considered when designing a pontic?

A

Cleansability - should always be smooth, surface should not harbour join of metal and porcelain
Appearance - as tooth like as possible
Strength - the longer the span, the greater the thickness required to withstand the occlusal forces

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10
Q

Describe a wash-through pontic

A

Makes no contact with soft tissues
Functional rather than appearance
Considered in lower molar area

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11
Q

Describe a dome-shaped (torpedo or bulled-shaped) pontic

A

Useful in lower incisor, premolar or upper molar area
Upper 2/3 looks like a real tooth
Poor aesthetics if lower 1/3 is visible
Lower 1/3 allows for better cleaning

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12
Q

Describe a modified ridge-lap pontic

A

Buccal surface looks as tooth like as possible
Lingual surface cut away (tooth looks good from facial perspective)
Line contact with buccal or ridge
Problems with food packing on lingual ridge

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13
Q

Describe a ridge lap/saddle pontic

A

Greatest contact with soft tissue
If designed well, can be cleaned
Less food packing than ridge lap
Care taken not to displace soft tissue or cause blanching of tissue

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14
Q

Describe an ovate pontic

A

Good for patients with good oral hygiene
Presses down on gingivae causing gingivae to mould into a divot, moulding the gingivae
Used in tandem with an Essix retainer to mould the gingivae giving a good aesthetic appearance

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15
Q

What material types are used for conventional bridges

A

All metal - gold, NiCoCr or SS
Metal ceramic
All ceramic - zirconia or lithium disilicate (Emax)
Ceromeric - porcelain combined with composite eg - BelleGlass

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16
Q

Where are gold and metal ceramic bridges often used?

A

Gold - lower posterior area
Metal ceramic - anywhere, majority of bridges in UK

17
Q

Describe the clinical procedure for conventional bridgework before preparing the teeth

A

Mounted study models
Consider diagnostic wax up
Request lab to construct a vacuum formed stent
Select shade
Impression for provisional bridge

18
Q

Describe the clinical procedure for conventional bridgework while prepping the teeth

A

Occlusal or incisal reduction
Separation of teeth
Aim for parallelism
Consider retentive features such as slots or grooves

19
Q

Describe the clinical procedure for conventional bridgework after prepping the teeth

A

Construct provisional bridge
Make impression and occlusal registration
Temporarily cement provisional bridge
Demonstrate cleaning with superfloss
Write/draw prescription for technician (pontic, abutments, shades, materials)

20
Q

Why is parallelism used in tooth prep for bridges

A

So bridge only has a single path of insertion, making better retention
Be careful not to make an undercut

21
Q

What cement is used for an all metal conventional bridge?

A

Aquacem (GI luting cement) or
RelyXLuting (RMGI luting cement)

22
Q

What cement is used for a metal ceramic bridge?

A

Aquacem (GI luting cement) or
RelyXLuting (RMGI luting cement)

23
Q

What cement is used for an adhesive/resin bonded/resin retained bridge?

A

Panavia 21 (dual cure resin cement with 10-MDP)

24
Q

What cement is used for an all ceramic bridge?

A

NEXUS kit (dual cure resin cement)

25
Q

What is the purpose of 10-MDP?

A

Helps tooth stick to medal

26
Q

Why should distal cantilevers be avoided?

A

Occlusal forces on pontic will produce leverage forces on the abutment causing it to tilt

27
Q

When is a distal cantilever considered?

A

From premolar abutment if unopposed or opposed by a denture to give the patient second premolars (shortened dental arch)