Author/Authors :
Cordeiro de Oliveira, Janaina Department of Dentistry - Federal University of Santa Catarina, Florianópolis, Brazil , Beatriz Sordi, Mariane Federal University of Santa Catarina, Florianópolis, Brazil , Cristiane Cabral da Cruz, Ariadne Laboratory of Applied Virology - Federal University of Santa Catarina, Florianópolis, Brazil , Virgínia Zanetti, Raquel São Leopoldo Mandic University, Campinas, Brazil , Aureo Golçalves Betiol, Ederson 5Department of Dentistry - Federal University of Paraná, Curitiba, Brazil , Roberto Vieira, Sérgio 6Private Practice, Curitiba, Brazil , Luiz Zanetti, Artêmio Department of Prosthodontics - Faculty of Dentistry - University of São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil
Abstract :
Background. Local or systemic issues might prevent installing a sufficient number of dental implants
for fixed prosthetic rehabilitation. Splinting dental implants and natural teeth in fixed dentures could
overcome such limitations. Therefore, this study aimed to evaluate the influence of the number of dental
abutments in the biomechanics of tooth‒implant-supported fixed partial dentures. The null hypothesis
was that increasing the number of abutment teeth would not decrease the stress over the abutments and
surrounding bone.
Methods. Left mandibular lateral incisor, canine, premolars, and molars were reconstructed through
computed tomography and edited using image processing software to represent a cemented fixed metal‒
ceramic partial denture. Three models were set to reduce the number of abutment teeth: 1) lateral incisor,
canine, and first premolar; 2) canine and first premolar; 3) the first premolar. The second premolar and
first molar were set as pontics, and the second molar was set as an implant abutment in all the models.
Finite element analyses were performed under physiologic masticatory forces with axial and oblique
loading vectors.
Results. After simulation of axial loads, the stress peaks on the bone around the implant, the bone
around the first premolar, and prosthetic structures did not exhibit significant changes when the number
of abutment teeth decreased. However, under oblique loads, decreasing the number of abutment teeth
increased stress peaks on the surrounding bone and denture.
Conclusion. Increasing the number of dental abutments in tooth‒implant-supported cemented fixed
partial denture models decreased stresses on its constituents, favoring the prosthetic biomechanics
Keywords :
Dental prosthesis , Finite element analysis , Fixed partial denture , Implant-supported