A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Enhancement of Gingival Tissue Adherence of Zirconia Implant Posts: In Vitro Study




AuthorsZühlke Alexandra, Gasik Michael, Shahramian Khalil, Närhi Timo, Bilotsky Yevgen, Kangasniemi Ilkka

PublisherMDPI

Publication year2021

JournalMaterials

Journal name in sourceMATERIALS

Journal acronymMATERIALS

Article numberARTN 455

Volume14

Issue2

Number of pages12

eISSN1996-1944

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.3390/ma14020455

Self-archived copy’s web addresshttps://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/53388637


Abstract
Prevention of bacterial inflammation around dental implants (peri-implantitis) is one of the keys to success of the implantation and can be achieved by securing the gingival tissue-abutment interface preventing penetration of bacteria. Modern dental practice has adopted zirconia abutments in place of titanium, but the adhesion of gingival tissue to zirconia is inferior to titanium. The aim of this study was to assess and improve the adhesion of mucosal tissues to zirconia posts using sol-gel derived TiO2 coating following dynamic mechanical testing. The posts were cultivated with porcine bone-gingival tissue specimens in vitro for 7 and 14 days and then subjected to dynamic mechanical analysis simulating physiological loading at 1 Hz up to 50 mu m amplitude. In parallel in silico analysis of stresses and strains have been made simulating "the worst case" when the fixture fails in osseointegration while the abutment still holds. Results show treatment of zirconia can lead to double interface stiffness (static shear stiffness values from 5-10 to 17-23 kPa and dynamic from 20-50 to 60-125 kPa), invariant viscostiffness (from 5-35 to 45-90 kPa center dot s(alpha)) and material memory values (increased from 0.06-0.10 to 0.17-0.25), which is beneficial in preventing bacterial contamination in dental implants. This suggests TiO2-coated zirconia abutments may have a significant clinical benefit for prevention of the bacterial contamination.

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