Premium
A Comparison of an Accelerated Technique for Casting Post‐and‐Core Restorations With Conventional Techniques
Author(s) -
Campagni Wayne V.,
Reisbick Morris H.,
Jugan Milan
Publication year - 1993
Publication title -
journal of prosthodontics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.902
H-Index - 60
eISSN - 1532-849X
pISSN - 1059-941X
DOI - 10.1111/j.1532-849x.1993.tb00401.x
Subject(s) - core (optical fiber) , post and core , materials science , casting , dentistry , medicine , metallurgy , composite material , crown (dentistry)
Purpose This project compares an accelerated technique for the casting of post‐and‐core restorations with four traditional techniques. The accelerated technique uses two phosphate‐bonded investments and the traditional techniques use a gypsum‐ and a phosphate‐bonded investment. The study measures and compares the differences between the seating of the casting and the seating of the acrylic resin pattern. The effects of the techniques on the fit of castings with and without a ferrule are also compared. Materials and Methods Six groups of 10 castings were made from plastic patterns formed on a stainless steel test die. A different investment and/or burnout method was used for each group. Each group had two subgroups: ferruled and nonferruled. The fit of the plastic patterns was measured at two time intervals after forming, 2 weeks and 3 months. The patterns were invested immediately after the 3‐month measurement, and the difference in fit of the castings was calculated. An ANOVA and Tuckey‐Kramer test were done to determine the statistical validity. Results The seating of the patterns after 3 months of storage was consistently worse than the 2‐week measurements of fit. The ferrule and nonferrule patterns were not statistically different in seating. Measurement of the castings showed that the ferruled castings seated significantly worse than the nonferrule castings. The difference in the seating of the castings as compared with the patterns was considered clinically unacceptable, showing a range of 0.301 mm to 0.528 mm. The nonferrule castings showed a significant difference in seating among groups. The difference ranged from ‐ 0.099 mm to 0.322 mm. Conclusions The castings of the ferrule subgroups were considered clinically unacceptable and were not analyzed for significance. Among the nonferrule castings, the group using a gypsum investment and conventional technique for investing and burnout but no ring liner showed the best seating. The accelerated technique was intermediate in seating with a difference of 0.148 mm from the seating of the patterns. This group was significantly different from the two best groups but not from the remaining three groups.