Publication:
Influence of Implant Abutment Material on the Color of Different Ceramic Crown Systems

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

Statement of problem Ceramics are widely used for anterior restorations; however, clinical color reproduction still constitutes a challenge particularly when the ceramic crowns are used on titanium implant abutments. Purpose The purpose of this in vitro study was to investigate the effect of implant abutment material on the color of different ceramic material systems. Material and methods Forty disks (11×1.5 mm, shade A2) were fabricated from medium-opacity (mo) and high-translucency (ht) lithium disilicate (IPS e.max) blocks, an aluminous ceramic (VITA In-Ceram Alumina), and a zirconia (Zirkonzahn) ceramic system. Disks were fabricated to represent 3 different implant abutments (zirconia, gold-palladium, and titanium) and dentin (composite resin, A2 shade) as background (11×2 mm). Disk-shaped composite resin specimens in A2 shade were fabricated to represent the cement layer. The color measurements of ceramic specimens were made on composite resin abutment materials using a spectrophotometer. CIELab color coordinates were recorded, and the color coordinates measured on composite resin background served as the control group. Color differences (ΔE<inf>00</inf>) between the control and test groups were calculated. The data were analyzed with 2-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) and compared with the Tukey HSD test (α=.05). Results The ceramics system, abutment material, and their interaction were significant for ΔE<inf>00</inf> values (P<.001). Clinically unacceptable results (ΔE<inf>00</inf>>2.25) were observed for lithium disilicate ceramics on titanium abutments (2.46-2.50). The ΔE<inf>00</inf> values of lithium disilicate ceramics for gold-palladium and titanium abutments were significantly higher than for other groups (P<.05). Conclusion The color results (ΔE<inf>00</inf>>2.25) of an implant-supported lithium disilicate ceramic restoration may be clinically unacceptable if it is fabricated over a titanium abutment. Zirconia may be a more suitable abutment material for implant-supported ceramic restorations. © 2016 Editorial Council for the Journal of Prosthetic Dentistry

Description

Keywords

Citation

WoS Q

Q1

Scopus Q

Q1

Source

Journal of Prosthetic Dentistry

Volume

116

Issue

5

Start Page

764

End Page

769

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By