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The influence of abutment screw tightening on screw joint configuration

Authors :
Lisa A. Lang
Kenneth B. May
Rui Feng Wang
Source :
The Journal of Prosthetic Dentistry. 87:74-79
Publication Year :
2002
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2002.

Abstract

Statement of Problem. Limiting abutment-to-implant hexagonal discrepancies and rotational movement of the abutment around the implant to less than 5 degrees would result in a more stable screw joint. However, the exact relationship after abutment screw tightening is unknown, as is the effect of a counter-torque device in limiting abutment movement during screw tightening. Purpose. This study examined the orientation of the abutment hexagon to the implant hexagon after tightening of the abutment screw for several abutment systems with and without the use of a counter-torque device. Material and Methods. Thirty conical self-tapping implants (3.75 × 10.0 mm) and 10 wide-platform Branemark System implants (5.0 × 10.0 mm), along with 10 abutment specimens from the CeraOne, Estheticone, Procera, and AuraAdapt systems, were selected for this investigation. The implants were placed in a holding device prior to tightening of the abutments. When the tightening torque recommended for each abutment system was reached with the use of a torque controller, each implant abutment specimen was removed from the holding device and embedded in a hard resin medium. The specimens were sectioned in a horizontal direction at the level of the hexagons and cleansed of debris prior to examination. The hexagon orientations were assessed as the degree and direction of rotation of the abutment hexagon around the implant hexagon. Results. The range of the maximum degrees of rotation for all 4 abutment groups tightened with or without the counter-torque device was slightly more than 3.53 degrees. The absolute degrees of rotation for all 4 abutment groups were less than 1.50 degrees with or without the use of the counter-torque device. Conclusion. The hexagon-to-hexagon orientation measured as rotational fit on all abutment systems was below the 5 degrees suggested as optimal for screw joint stability. The absolute degrees of rotation for all 4 abutment groups were less than 1.50 degrees regardless of whether the counter-torque device was used. (J Prosthet Dent 2002;87:74-9.)

Details

ISSN :
00223913
Volume :
87
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Prosthetic Dentistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4f2ddf5a341949d6614a23d0a65fb954