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A Technique to Fabricate a New Crown to an Existing Removable Partial Denture
Author(s) -
Tom Bereznicki,
Manraj Rai
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
primary dental journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.143
H-Index - 11
eISSN - 2050-1692
pISSN - 2050-1684
DOI - 10.1177/2050168420980993
Subject(s) - abutment , crown (dentistry) , removable partial denture , computer science , orthodontics , dentistry , coronal plane , engineering , medicine , dentures , structural engineering , radiology
Fabricating a crown for a tooth that serves as an abutment for an existing removable partial denture (RPD) provides a restorative challenge. Typically, the compromised tooth requiring an extra-coronal restoration is initially restored. It is followed by the construction of a new RPD that accurately fits the restored abutment. An increasingly common scenario is that the existing RPD is deemed clinically acceptable and, therefore, does not require replacing. This results in the clinical dilemma of fabricating a crown for an abutment tooth, while also considering how the contours of this restoration will fit with the RPD’s clasps and rests. This can be achieved through the use of various techniques subdivided into indirect, direct and combined indirect-direct. This article describes an indirect-direct technique used in conjunction with the functionally generated path technique to achieve accurately a stable record of the patient’s occlusion in the fabrication of a new crown to an existing RPD.

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