粘接剂修复受严重侵蚀影响的上颌前牙:长达6年的前瞻性临床研究结果。

Francesca Vailati, Linda Gruetter, Urs Christoph Belser
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引用次数: 0

摘要

未标示:如果牙齿严重腐蚀,上颌前牙通常会受到特别的影响。传统的修复这些牙齿(即冠)通常涉及选择性牙髓治疗和牙齿结构的主要额外损失。一种新型的、微创的修复侵蚀牙齿的方法已经开发出来,目前正在以前瞻性临床试验的形式进行测试,称为日内瓦侵蚀研究。为了避免冠,不论临床冠的长度和剩余牙釉质的数量,均采用两种不同插入路径的独立贴面来修复受影响的上颌前牙。这种疗法被称为“三明治疗法”。目的:本病例系列研究的目的是分析上颌前牙严重侵蚀后采用夹心入路修复的中期临床结果。材料与方法:连续就诊的12例晚期牙糜烂患者(平均年龄39.4岁)纳入研究并进行治疗。由于疾病截留较晚,所有患者都需要全口康复,无需任何传统冠。在上颌前牙水平,共完成70例腭间接复合修复和64例面层长石陶瓷贴面修复。两种类型的贴面都用混合复合材料粘接。在植入贴片6个月后进行临床重新评估,然后每年进行一次,使用修改后的美国公共卫生服务(USPHS)标准。主要临床参数为边缘适应、边缘完整性(封闭、无浸润)、牙髓活力状态、术后敏感性、美观性和修复成败。结果:经过长达6年的观察时间(腭贴面平均观察时间50.3个月,面贴面平均观察时间49.6个月),未发生完全或严重的修复失败。根据使用的标准,大多数单板的边缘适应性和边缘密封性均为Alpha级。未发现继发性龋齿或牙髓并发症。采用视觉模拟量表分析,以患者为中心的满意度显示出较高的审美和功能接受度,为94.6%。结论:与常规冠预备相比,采用双贴面修复受损上颌前牙,可避免过度的牙齿结构去除和牙齿活力的丧失。由于待修复牙齿的初始状态不佳(如缺乏牙釉质、牙本质基质硬化和临床牙冠短),这种新治疗方法的寿命出现了问题。采用三明治法治疗的牙齿的临床表现似乎很有希望,因为治疗的牙齿没有失去活力,没有发现任何修复失败,患者的总体满意度很高。尽管需要进一步的研究来确定所描述的治疗方式的临床长期表现,但令人鼓舞的中期结果(生物学、美学和机械成功)清楚地质疑,上颌前段的传统冠是否仍然可以继续被认为是治疗这一特殊患者的最佳和唯一选择。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Adhesively restored anterior maxillary dentitions affected by severe erosion: up to 6-year results of a prospective clinical study.

Unlabelled: In case of severe dental erosion, the maxillary anterior teeth are often particularly affected. Restoring such teeth conventionally (ie, crowns) would frequently involve elective endodontic therapy and major additional loss of tooth structure. A novel, minimally invasive approach to restore eroded teeth has been developed and is currently being tested in the form of a prospective clinical trial, termed The Geneva Erosion Study. To avoid crowns, two separate veneers with different paths of insertion have been used to restore the affected anterior maxillary teeth, regardless of clinical crown length and amount of remaining enamel. This treatment is called The Sandwich Approach.

Objectives: The purpose of this case series study was to analyze the mid-term clinical outcome of maxillary anterior teeth affected by severe dental erosion that were restored following the Sandwich Approach.

Materials and methods: Twelve consecutively consulting patients (mean age: 39.4 years) suffering from advanced dental erosion have been enrolled in the study and were subsequently treated. Due to the late interception of the disease, all patients needed a full-mouth rehabilitation, which was performed without any conventional crowns. At the level of the maxillary anterior teeth, a total of 70 palatal indirect composite restorations and 64 facial feldspathic ceramic veneers were delivered. Both types of veneers were adhesively luted with a hybrid composite. Clinical reevaluations were performed 6 months after insertion of the veneers, and then annually, using modified United States Public Health Service (USPHS) criteria. Marginal adaptation, marginal integrity (seal, absence of infiltration), status of pulp vitality, postoperative sensitivity, esthetics, and restoration success/failure, were the principal clinical parameters analyzed.

Results: After an up to 6-year observation time (mean observation time 50.3 months for the palatal veneers and 49.6 months for the facial veneers), no complete or major failure of the restorations was encountered. On the basis of the criteria used, most of the veneers rated Alpha for marginal adaptation and marginal seal. Secondary caries or endodontic complications were not detected. Using visual analogue scale analysis, the patient-centered satisfaction revealed a high esthetic and functional acceptance of 94.6%.

Conclusions: Compared to conventional crown preparation, restoring compromised maxillary anterior teeth by means of 2 veneers prevents excessive tooth structure removal and loss of tooth vitality. Questions on the longevity of this new treatment arise, due to the nonfavorable initial status of the teeth to be restored (eg, lack of enamel, sclerotic dentin substrate and short clinical crowns). The clinical performance of the teeth treated following the Sandwich Approach seems promising, since none of the treated teeth lost their vitality, no failure of any of the restorations was detected, and the patients' overall satisfaction was high. Even though further investigation is needed to determine the clinical long-term performance of the described treatment modality, the encouraging mid-term results (biological, esthetic, and mechanical success) clearly question if conventional crowns in the anterior maxillary segments can still continue to be considered the best and only option to treat this particular population of patients.

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