Heliyon (Oct 2024)
Multiaxial fatigue life assessment of dental implants
Abstract
As screwed joints, dental restorations may suffer mechanical failures such as screw loosening and implant or prosthetic screw failure due to fatigue. This work is focused on the failure of the implant and develops a numerical methodology to predict its fatigue life under cyclic loading conditions. This methodology is based on the combination of Critical Plane Methods and the Theory of Critical Distances to account for stress multiaxiality and notch effects. The obtained predictions were validated experimentally, which can be used to identify the main geometrical, assembly and operational factors affecting the fatigue behavior of dental implants. As a result, a powerful and efficient design tool for fatigue life prediction of dental implants is presented. This methodology complements a previously presented one focused on the fatigue life prediction of the prosthetic screw, thereby, offering now a complete design tool package regardless the critical component of the dental restoration, predicting accurately the fatigue response of the restoration, with no need for long-term fatigue test campaigns. This is a pioneering work since no other fatigue design methodology for dental implants with such a solid foundation and experimental validation has been published to date.