1. Full Zirconia Implant-Born Prosthetic Rehabilitation with CAD/CAM Technology after Accurate Digital Planning. A Case Report
- Author
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Giuseppe Lizio, Francesca De Angelis, Luigi V. Stefanelli, Michele Pagliarulo, Michele Nannelli, Gerardo Pellegrino, Riccardo Scaringi, Alessio Franchina, Scaringi R., Nannelli M., Franchina A., Lizio G., Stefanelli L.V., Pagliarulo M., De Angelis F., and Pellegrino G.
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Prosthetic rehabilitation ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,medicine.medical_treatment ,zirconium ,Dentistry ,Single crown ,CAD ,Case Report ,Prosthesis ,computer-aided design ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,CAD/CAM technology ,zirconia rehabilitation ,dental implantology ,adult ,crowns ,humans ,technology ,Cubic zirconia ,Zirconia rehabilitation ,business.industry ,Impaction ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Deciduous tooth ,030206 dentistry ,030104 developmental biology ,Medicine ,Implant ,business - Abstract
CAD/CAM technology can enhance the dentistry application of ceramic materials that meet the more relevant biocompatibility and aesthetics demands. In implant-borne prosthesis rehabilitation, yttria-stabilized zirconia appeared to be a valid alternative to metal-alloys and titanium, with comparable mechanical properties and even better interaction with bone and soft tissues. The improvement of monolithic CAD/CAM manufacturing allows for a reliable, predictable, and rapid workflow that can correspond to a holistic treatment philosophy associated with zirconia fixtures. This reported clinical case highlights the advantages of this approach in resolving particularly functionally and aesthetically complex situations. A 40-year-old patient with permanent canine impaction and the persistence of a deciduous tooth compromised by caries was successfully rehabilitated with the surgical removal of the enclosed tooth, the seating of a mono-phase zirconia implant after the deciduous extraction and its loading with a zirconia single crown, without any clinical or radiographical alteration up to seven years follow-up.
- Published
- 2021