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The aim of this study is to evaluate the clinical performance of two finish line designs (feather edge and rounded shoulder) in relation with two occlusal designs (flat and planar) in endodontically treated teeth restored with zirconia crowns.
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Several studies have been investigating the effect of preparation design and its relation to the marginal adaptation. Habib et al 2014 compared the accuracy of marginal and internal adaptation of zirconia copings fabricated on anatomic (A), semi-anatomic (SA) and non-anatomic (NA) occlusal surface preparations. The internal & marginal fit were measured under electron microscope at 9 standardized areas .The anatomical occlusal preparation had better marginal and internal adaptation of Zr copings. Lima et al 2018 studied the influence of two different occlusal preparation designs on the marginal adaptation of CAD-CAM onlay restorations. The conventional anatomical occlusal preparation with a 1.2-mm modified shoulder finish line extending on the buccal surface and modified preparation flat cuspal reduction without shoulder finish line. The results showed that the conventional anatomical occlusal preparation had significantly better marginal adaptation than that of the flat cuspal preparation. Succeeding these studies, it was of interest to investigate whether or not the occlusal scheme could influence the marginal accuracy of the CAD/CAM crowns fabricated with Zirconia ceramic material.
Studies correlating between the finish line design and occlusal scheme in literature are scarce, with little evidence regarding their effect on precision fit properties of restorations. Abdullah et al 2017 evaluated the effect of using different finishing line designs with different occlusal surface reduction schemes on the vertical marginal fit of full contour CAD/CAM zirconia crown restorations. They found a direct correlation between both the finish line geometry and the occlusal design. In recent literature, the use of feather edge finish line with all ceramic restorations is a point of conflict. Fuzzi et al 2017 studied the nanoleakage and internal adaptations of lithium disilicate and zirconia crowns with featheredge finish lines. They recommended only zirconia with this finish line configuration due to its high fracture resistance when used in thin sections. Thus, the current study was conducted to examine this finish line effect on the marginal precision fit. Our hypothesis is there will be no difference in the clinical performance between the flat occlusal scheme with feather edge or rounded shoulder finish line and the planar occlusal scheme with rounded shoulder finish line configuration.
The rationale for carrying out the trial:
The influence of different tooth preparation designs can affect the success of the full coverage restorations. Still, there is no available research dealing with the effect of finishing line designs in combination with different occlusal reduction schemes on the marginal fit of full contour zirconia crowns.
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66 participants in 3 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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