This clinical study seeks to address four independent questions that are all part of the delivery of care associated with the provision of a single item of treatment; an indirect restoration (known as a 'crown') to restore and cover a damaged tooth. The provision of a crown requires a series of sequential clinical and laboratory stages stages: 1. Stage 1 - Preliminary impression. Taking a pre-operative impression of the tooth to be crowned. This will be used to enable the fabrication of the temporary crown after the tooth has been prepared. This is standard care and follows established clinical protocols. 2. Stage 2 - Preparation of the tooth. This involves cutting the tooth back to make space for the crown that will be fabricated to replace the missing structure. 3. Stage 3 - Taking an impression of the prepared tooth. From this a duplicate model will be made to fabricate the crown. To take the impression, the dentist will need to gently push the gums away from the tooth by fractions of a millimeter so that the margins of the preparation are clearly discernible. 4. Stage 4 - Provision of a temporary restoration that will provide satisfactory function for a limited period of time, until the definitive crown can be fitted. This temporary crown is designed to have a finite short-term durability and have an ease of manufacture and subsequent removal; hence the use of a specific cement that will enable this. 5. Stage 5 - Fitting of the definitive restoration. This is designed to be a durable restoration, with a mean life expectancy measured in years, but which is ultimately determined by a number of clinical, biological and patient specific parameters. Definitive restorations are fitted with cement designed to retain the crown in permanent manner.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
OTHER
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
20
The 1st intervention will compare two clinical impression techniques The Innovation treatment arm will receive the innovation treatment first and then crossover to receive the standard clinical practice treatment. The standard clinical practice treatment will receive the standard clinical practice treatment first and then crossover to receive the innovation treatment.
Sheffield NHS Trust
Sheffield, United Kingdom
Assessment of the predictability
Assessment of the predictability of results as a function of accuracy of the resulting model, the dentist's judgment on the quality of impression and the accuracy of fit of the definitive restoration (Lava™ Plus Zirconia crown). Predictability is defined as the frequency in which an adequate result is obtained in a consistent manner
Time frame: 48 months
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