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Evaluation of the Marginal Fit of CAD / CAM Crowns Fabricated Using Two Different Chairside CAD / CAM Systems on Preparations of Varying Quality
Author(s) -
Renne Walter,
Wolf Bethany,
Kessler Raymond,
McPherson Karen,
Mennito Anthony S.
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
journal of esthetic and restorative dentistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.919
H-Index - 60
eISSN - 1708-8240
pISSN - 1496-4155
DOI - 10.1111/jerd.12148
Subject(s) - cerec , cad , significant difference , dentistry , orthodontics , crown (dentistry) , mathematics , computer science , engineering drawing , ceramic , medicine , materials science , statistics , engineering , composite material
Purpose This study evaluated the marginal gap of crowns fabricated using two new chairside computer‐aided design/computer‐aided manufacturing systems on preparations completed by clinicians with varying levels of expertise to identify whether common preparation errors affect marginal fit. The null hypothesis is that there is no difference in the mean marginal gaps of restorations of varying qualities and no difference in the mean marginal gap size between restorations fabricated using the P lan S can ( D4D , R ichardson, TX, USA ) and the CEREC O mnicam ( S irona, B ensheim, G ermany). Material and Methods The fit of 80 lithium disilicate crowns fabricated with the E4D P lan S can or CEREC O mnicam systems on preparations of varying quality were examined for marginal fit by using the replica technique. These same preparations were then visually examined against common criteria for anterior all‐ceramic restorations and placed in one of four categories: excellent, good, fair, and poor. Linear mixed modeling was used to evaluate associations between marginal gap, tooth preparation rating, and fabrication machine. Results The fit was not significantly different between both systems across all qualities of preparation. The average fit was 104 μm for poor‐quality preparations, 87.6 μm for fair preparations, 67.2 μm for good preparations, and 36.6 μm for excellent preparations. Conclusion The null hypothesis is rejected. It can be concluded that preparation quality has a significant impact on marginal gap regardless of which system is used. However, no significant difference was found when comparing the systems to each other. Clinical Significance Within the limitations of this in vitro study, it can be concluded that crown preparation quality has a significant effect on marginal gap of the restoration when the clinician uses either CEREC O mnicam or E4D P lans S can.