Operative dentistry aje qualtrough, jd satterthwaite la morrow, pa brunton
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Principles of Operative Dentistry.compressed
Resistance
In order to increase resistance to displacement due to lateral or rotational forces, the preparation requires minimal taper and also increased height. The increased height of preparation must have a constant diameter as parallel walls that are not on the same base do not provide stability (Fig. 5.7). When the clinical crown is short, or it is not possible to obtain near parallelism, additional features such as grooves, slots or boxes can enhance the resistance form significantly by reducing the radius of rotation of the final crown 17 . These features should be prepared in the long axis of the preparation and not just placed in line with the axial wall. Axial grooves should, if possible, be placed into sound tissue of a cusp and not into core material, which may be inherently weak. There should be a definite wall perpendicular to the direction of the force in order to limit the freedom of displacement and provide adequate resistance. Axial grooves effectively improve the height:diameter ratio, and enhance retention as well as resistance. In some situations even the use of additional features will not pro- vide enough resistance and in such cases surgical crown lengthening may be utilised to increase the available clinical crown height. This scenario, where the need to create interocclusal space by preparation would result in short crowns with limited resistance, is discussed in Chapter 6. Principles of indirect restoration 121 Fig. 5.7 Resistance provided by parallel walls at the same level. POOC05 02/18/2005 04:36PM Page 121 122 Chapter 5 Marginal integrity The margin of the restoration (or finishing line) is the area at which the restoration ends and presents a junction of restorative material and tooth substance at the tooth surface. Finishing lines should not rou- tinely be placed subgingivally, but should be placed where they may be easily finished by the operator, cleaned by the patient and duplic- ated by the impression. They should be placed on sound tooth sub- stance, not the core, as this would result in concentration of stress on the core and predisposition to failure. If possible, finishing lines should be placed on enamel (though it is common for margins to end on dentine or even cementum) and end 2 mm below the core 6 in order to support and protect the core through a ferrule effect (Fig 5.8). A ferrule will decrease the incidence of core fracture and will also decrease the incidence of root fracture with intra-radicular posts. A sub-gingival margin may be inevitable when: • Caries or a crack extends subgingivally. • A restoration extends subgingivally. • Extra axial length is required for retention. • Aesthetics are essential – however a large number of margins placed in the sulcus become supragingival because of gingival maturation or recession. It has been suggested that ideal placement is at the level of the retracted gingivae 18 . In determining the shape of tooth reduction at the margin, the aim must be to produce as small a marginal gap or discrepancy as possible. Apart from the increased potential for caries with an open Download 0.95 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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