The aim of this comparative RCT is to evaluate the differences between the entire digital, the combined digital-analogic and the entire analogic workflows of implant-supported and teeth-supported prostheses. It is a three-arms comparative study. The 60 patients are divided into three groups: * fully digital workflow * combined digital and conventional workflow * fully conventional workflow For each patients were evaluated the interproximal (IC) and occlusal contact (OC) and impression time (IT) and the patient satisfaction through a VAS scale. The null hypothesis is that are no differences between the three groups for each parameter.
This comparative RCT aims to evaluate the differences between the entire digital, the combined digital-analogic, and the entire analogic workflows of implant-supported and teeth-supported prostheses. It is a three-arms comparative study to better focus on the reliability of digital techniques. Inclusion criteria were good oral health, absence of parafunction, no dental caries or presence of periodontitis, and healthy general conditions. Exclusion criteria were bad oral health, parafunctions, dental caries or periodontitis, and general health comorbidities that don't allow surgical treatment. The 60 patients are divided into three groups: * fully digital workflow: each patient in this group was treated with an exclusively digital workflow, from digital planning of the surgical phase to digital impression and digital manufacturing of prosthetic crowns. * combined digital and conventional workflow: each patient of this group was subjected to digital planning, and then, the impressions were taken with traditional analogical materials, so the plaster model was converted into a digital model, and there finally was performed a digital manufacturing of prosthetic crown. * entirely conventional workflow: each patient was treated with an analogical technique. No digital phase was performed. After prosthetic delivery, each patient were evaluated for interproximal (IC) and occlusal contact (OC), impression time (IT), and patient satisfaction through a VAS scale. The null hypothesis is that there are no significant differences between the three groups.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
60
The intervention that was administered was a full digital workflow. It includes an initial digital planning, an optical impression with intraoral scanner and a CAD-CAM milled zirconia crown. No analog materials were used.
The intervention that was administered was a combined digital and traditional workflow. The initial planning was digital, then the impression was performed with analog impression material (silicones) and the final zirconia crown was CAD-CAM milled, with a digital procedure.
The intervention that was administered was a conventional workflow that doesn't provide any digital step. The impression was taken with analog material (silicones) and the final prosthesis was a metal-ceramic crown, realized on plaster cast.
Massimo Corsalini
Bari, Italy
Entity of interproximal contact
Precision of interproximal contact between prosthetic crown and adjacent teeth. It was measured by the clinician evaluating the resistance to the sliding of waxed dental floss. The clinician gives to the interproximal contact a score from 0 to 4, where 0 is considered as an absence of resistance (open space between crown and adjacent teeth) and 4 is the total impediment to the floss slide (the crown and the adjacent teeth are too close to have a correct interproximal contact)
Time frame: 2 weeks after definitive prosthesis delivery
Entity of occlusal contact
The entity of contact between prosthetic crown and antagonist teeth was evaluated with a dichromatic articulating paper in order to identify any static and dynamic alterations in occlusal contacts that must be corrected. The clinician gives a score from 0 to 3 where 0 is the absence of contact between crown and antagonists, 1 is a correct contact between them that needs no corrections, 2 there is a slight altered contact that requires minor corrections and 3 there is an altered contact between the prosthetic crown and their antagonists which requires major corrections.
Time frame: 2 weeks after definitive prosthesis delivery
Impression time
Length of time useful to take impression expressed in seconds
Time frame: 2 weeks after definitive prosthesis delivery
Patient satisfaction degree
Patient satisfaction through a VAS scale. The patients is asked to make a mark in an unnumbered line ranging from 0 to 5 where 0 represents maximum comfort and 5 represents a very bad experience. The scale is 5 cm long so the clinician next measures the distance (in cm) from 0 to where the mark was placed by the patient.
Time frame: 2 weeks after definitive prosthesis delivery
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