Journal of Clinical and Diagnostic Research (Mar 2015)

The Influence of Implant Abutment Surface Roughness and the Type of Cement on Retention of Implant Supported Crowns

  • S. Varalakshmi Reddy,
  • M. Sushender Reddy,
  • C. Rajaneesh Reddy,
  • Padmaja Pithani,
  • Santosh Kumar R,
  • Ganesh Kulkarni

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7860/JCDR/2015/12060.5621
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 3
pp. ZC05 – ZC07

Abstract

Read online

Objectives: To provide relative data on the retentive characters of the commonly used cements on different implant abutment surfaces. Materials and Methods: A total of 20 implant abutments were divided into 2 groups. Ten implants were unaltered and ten were air borne particle abraded with 50µ aluminium oxide. Three luting agents (Tempbond, IRM and ImProv) were used to secure the crowns to abutments. All the crowns were removed from the abutment with an Instron machine at 0.5mm per minute and tensile bond strengths were recorded. Statistical analysis was performed using Anova, Paired t-test and Post-Hoc tests. Results: IRM showed the highest mean tensile strength among the three cements when used with treated and untreated implant abutment surfaces. Change in the abutment surface roughness had no effect on the mean tensile bond strength of TempBond and IRM cements, whereas ImProv cement showed reduced tensile strength with sandblasted surface. Conclusion: When increased retention is required IRM cement with either sandblasted or milled surface could be used and when retrievability is required cements of choice could be either TempBond or ImProv.

Keywords