maintenance phase Flashcards
What is the maintenance phase?
Plan from outset
Part of prognosis
Patient understanding of limited life of restorations
Pt time and financial commitments
What determines how long something lasts?
Build quality- intra oral assembly (biological substrate and building materials, operator skill set and facilities and time)
Loading- product handling (in/direct loading forces [3-400N], para/functional [bruxism- 1000N])
Environment- bacterial biofilm, constantly wet, temp changes, variable pH, tooth-material interactions
Maintenance- comprehensive purpose designed maintenance schedule, fundamental to survival
How should a maintenance plan be given?
Discussed and agreed before finalising treatment strategy
Pt understand implications (time, finances, own health, oral hygiene)
What is the Weibull survival curve?
Initially- very high failure rate (catastrophic biological or structural failure)
Eg. Post perforation, inadequate aesthetics, occlusal interface, pulpitis, de-bonding
Then, low grade chronic disease
Eg. Secondary caries, occlusal trauma, periapical periodontitis
Lastly, fatigue related biological structural failure
Eg. RCT, root caries, porcelain chipping, cusp fracture
What should you do at review?
Check for new or continuing disease
Check adequacy of existing restorations
Check compliance w maintenance protocol
Determine future recall periods
WHY HAS IT HAPPENED?
What kind of technical failure may occur?
Fractured restorations
Marginal breakdown
Tooth fracture
Defective contour
Appearance
Retention failure
What is failure?
Unacceptable deterioration
Which is why prognosis needs to be established (INFORMED CONSENT)
What is planned maintenance?
Plan for failure where prognosis is guarded- anticipation
Avoid emergencies