Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
Matching the color of resin composite utilized in anterior teeth is believed to be one of the most challenging tasks a dentist has to face in daily practice. The color of the teeth is primary influenced by dentin; on the other hand, enamel has a major influence on the color perception in terms of lightness. In the layering concept, the missing dental tissues are substituted in increments with resin composite of the exact shade as the dental tissue. A translucent composite resin is applied over a more opaque composite resin to achieve a depth perception similar to that of the natural teeth. Which indicates that the visible color is the consequence of diffuse reflectance from the internal dentin or opaque material layer through the external translucent layer.
There are numerous elements that make the color matching problematic. These problems arise from the point that color matching rely on many different chromatic properties related to the teeth and resin composite; those include hue, chroma and value; translucency, opalescence and fluorescence; light diffusion and transmission; and luster and texture of the surface. To reach the ideal esthetics, restorative material should mimic the natural tooth in the previously mentioned properties, in addition of having a long time color stability.
Massive efforts were achieved over the years to improve the esthetic properties of dental resin composite restorative materials. Recently, a single shade structurally colored universal composite (Omnichroma, Tokuyama Dental) intended for use with most direct restorative clinical cases was introduced in the market. Its manufacturer claimed that it exhibits color change toward the color of the surrounding hard dental tissues. Thus, it has the advantages of improving the esthetic appearance of the restoration, decrease dependence on shade-matching procedures, decrease the number of shade guide tabs, and counteract for color mismatches to some degree.
Up till now no studies assessed the color match of Omnichroma resin composite in anterior teeth cavities clinically. Thus, the aim of this clinical trial was to investigate if the single shade structurally colored universal resin composite (OMNICHROMA) will modify its shade to match the tooth structure shade in anterior teeth cavities.
Full description
Participants' recruitment:
The patients will be selected from outpatient clinic of National Research Centre (NRC), Cairo; Egypt Eligible patients who agreed to participate in this trial will sign on written informed consents.
Clinical procedure
Conservative cavities will be prepared with #330 carbide bur (FG, Dentsply Midwest®) fixed to a high speed hand piece with water coolant system. Cavity preparation will be limited to the removal of caries and the exact cavity form and size will be obtained after caries removal. Each bur will be discarded after 5 preparations.
A functional esthetic enamel bevel will be prepared using a fine grained finishing diamond rotary instrument on the facial surface, the bevel enables harmonious shade transition from composite to tooth substance.
Omnichroma resin composite will be packed in the prepared cavities using a Teflon coated plastic instrument and the restoration will covered with celluloid strip to reduce the oxygen inhibition layer and to get a smooth surface, then light-cured for 40 sec. Excess material will be removed with scalpel. Finishing and polishing will be performed for the anatomical contouring and smoothing of the restorations surfaces using all grates of soflex discs, fine and Extra fine diamond burs, medium and fine rubber polishing points.
Color assessment Color match data will be recorded for the restoration after one week. The restorations will be gently dried with cotton and the color values of them will be recorded using the Vita Easyshade spectrophotometer.
The color changes (ΔE) will be calculated from the changes in CIE L, a, and b values (ΔL, Δa, Δb) as follows:
ΔE= [(ΔL)2 + (Δa)2 + (Δb)2]1/2 CIE Lab is expressed by the L coordinate representing color luminosity, varying from white to black, a and b coordinates representing the chromaticity of the color, with axes varying from green to red and blue to yellow, respectively. The mean of the values obtained will be calculated, and the L, a, and b parameters will be determined.
Visual assessment Visual assessment will be performed by two independent observers with normal color vision as checked by Ishiara test. To determine the color-matching between the restorations and the teeth. Color-matching visual scoring (VS) values will be expressed numerically as follows: 1: mismatch/totally unacceptable, 2: Poor-Match/hardly acceptable, 3: Good- Match/acceptable, 4: Close-Match/small-difference, and 5: Exact-Match/no-color-difference. All observers will be trained in color-matching and taught about the used grading system before the assessment.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
21 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal