7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

87
GOOD MORNING

Upload: zarir-ruttonji

Post on 20-Jan-2015

2.276 views

Category:

Business


5 download

DESCRIPTION

 

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

GOOD MORNING

Page 2: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

MATERIALS IN MAXILLOFACIAL

PROSTHODONTICS

Page 3: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Introduction • Objectives Of Maxillo-facial Prostheses• Materials -- ideal requirements

-- criteria for Maxillo-facial Materials

-- classification

-- advantages & disadvantages • Recent advances • Coloration • Adhesives • Limitations of the maxillofacial

materials• Disinfection of materials• Conclusion

CONTENTs

Page 4: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

.

INTRODUCTION

Page 5: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

In evolving a successful prosthetic facial

replacement ,3 factors are necessary:

1. Creative ability

2. Technical knowledge, &

3. Materials which will allow the

prosthodontist to fully exploit these

talents.

Page 6: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Objectives Of Maxillo-facial Prostheses

Restoration of esthetics or cosmetic appearance of the patient

Restoration of function

Protection of tissues

Therapeutic or healing effect

Psychologic therapy

CHALIAN,

Page 7: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

MATERIALS

Ideal Requisites Of Maxillo-facial Materials

Criteria For Maxillo-facial Materials

Classification

Advantages & Disadvantages

Page 8: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Ideal Requisites Of Maxillo-facial Materials……

1. Biocompatibility

2. Flexibility 3. Color and translucency

4. Chemical and environmental stability

5. Thermal conductivity

BEUMER, CHALIAN

Page 9: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

6. Ease of Processing

7. Strength –

8. Ease of duplication 9. Weight

10.Dimensional stability

BEUMER, CHALIAN

Page 10: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Processing Characteristics-1.Low Viscosity at

ambient temperature

2. Intrinsic and extrinsic Coloration possible

3.Low Solubility parameter

4. Sufficient working time

5. Low curing temperature

Performance Characteristic

(mechanical and physical properties)

Tensile strength

Tensile modulus

Tear resistance

Surface hardness

  

JPD 1984:51;521-523

Criteria For Maxillo-facial Materials

Page 11: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Patient accommodation properties- • Non allergic• Non-carcinogenic• Chemical and environmental stability• Moderate cost• Hygienic• Easy adherence to living tissue

JPD 1984:51;521-523

Page 12: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Classification

SURGICAL RECONSTRUCTION

PROSTHETIC RECONSTRUCTION

 

Impression phase

Modelling phase

Fabrication phase

Page 13: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Prosthetic reconstruction

• Agar-agar• Alginate• Room temp.

vulcanizing material

• Plaster of paris

Impression phase

• Modeling Clay (Sculptor’s Clay)

• Plaster• Plastolene • .Waxes

Modelling phase

• Extraoral materials

• Intraoral materials

Fabrication phase

Page 14: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

The impression serve 2 purposes:

1. Allows the dentist to accomplish the preliminary modeling without the patient present, which saves chairside time, eliminates unnecessary discomfort to the patient.

2. Patient education and teaching aids are also served with the resulting model.

Page 15: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Room Temperature Vulcanizing Materials-

Advantages 1. Fine detail obtainable2. Inherent strength. 3. Easy to obtain.

Disadvantages1. Needs backing.2. Difficulty in adjusting setting time. 3. Retaining walls needed for

confinement of material.4. High cost. CHALLIAN

Page 16: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Modeling materials…

Ideal Properties:

• Malleable

• sufficient body and strength

• Should be possible to accept texture into this material which will be imparted to the finished mold.

• The closer the color of the material to skin tone, less visual distortion

LANEY

Page 17: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

1. Modeling clay (sculptor’s clay) water based clay , when allowed to dry, becomes a hard stone like substance.

Advantages

Inexpensive

Readily available

Consistency can be

adjusted

feathered on the edge

Disadvantages

gray in color, and the color

differential causes visual distortion

Must be kept moist at all

times

Page 18: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

2. Plaster…… • Readily available • Inexpensive• Can be shaped or molded in

its plastic state• Easily and quickly prepared

for use Advantages

• Lacks elasticity • Adding material to build

contour is difficult • Tendency to flake on the

surface • Cannot be used in undercuts

Disadvantages

Page 19: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

3. PLASTOLENE…prepared modeling clay with oil base

Advantages Takes texture

well

Always ready for use

Easily malleable

Requires comparatively little

care Keep a feather edge

Disadvantages

more expensive

Color does not match skin tone

seep into stone model and affect the finished product

Page 20: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

4. Waxes……

keeps a feather edge

Readily available

Nominal cost

Color similar to skin tone

Advantages

Model must be carved rather than sculpted

Affect the finished product

Brittle when cooled

Disadvantages

Page 21: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Undertaker’s waxes

Properties similar standard dental waxes, except for 2 characteristics:

1. Due to low melting point, body heat allow it to become malleable & modeled quite readily with the fingers and hands

2. The color is good in relation to skin tissue.

Page 22: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read
Page 23: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Fabrication phase materials

Extraoral materials – acrylic resin vinyl chloride polymers polyurethane siliconeIntraoral materials -- silicones poly (methyl

methacrylate) At present silicones and polyurethane

materials are considered most desirable - strength, even though both are somewhat difficult to color.

J of Biomedical material research 2004:8(4);349-363

Page 24: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Extra oral materials

1. Poly-methyl methacrylate

- Palamed

2. Polyvinyl polymers and copolymers

- Realastic (poly vinyl chloride)

- Mediplas (polyvinyl acetate chloride)

3. Elastomers a) Polyurethane

- epithane 3

b) Silicone

- HTV

- RTV BEUMER

Page 25: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

1. Acrylic resin

Indications: Preferred for restoring

defects which require minimal movements.

e.g. fabrication of orbital prostheses.

• Useful in cases of rapidly changing defects where relining is mandatory.

BEUMER

Page 26: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Advantages 1. Easy to work with & to maintain.2. Durable.3. Easy to reline with a tissue conditioner or

reliner.4. Both extrinsic & intrinsic coloring can be

performed.5. Compatible with most adhesive system & can

be cleaned easily.

Disadvantages 1. Rigidity 2. Does not have the feel of skin. 3 High thermal conductivity. 4. Poor margin esthetics. 5. Surface gloss present.

BEUMER

Page 27: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Palamed

Cross linked co-polymer of methacrylics and acrylics.

Consists of base powders and stain concentrates, solvent liquid.

Shade guide is provided for base shade powders and stain concentrates.

Produces a soft, resilient skin with a spongy central mass, light weight

The sculptured wax is weighed to achieve the recommended ratio according to the weight ratio table. CHALLIAN, BEUMER

Page 28: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

In 1943 Tylman claimed that MMA could be combined with plasticizer ( PALAMED)

Plasticized MMA resin has been formulated with a foaming agent.

Palamed must be carefully proportioned because too much will result in a stiff heavy unstable product or too little will result in incomplete filled mold with large pores.

BEUMER

Page 29: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Use of visible light cure resin system in maxillofacial prosthetics VLC resins underwent polymerization without

substantial exothermic reaction. Biologic testing indicated–

they are non toxic & biocompatible.

Useful in the replacement of large full-

thickness defects in the cranium & other regions.

Also used in mandibular augmentation

Advantages :

Page 30: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

2. VINYL POLYMERS & COPOLYMERS

Most widely used plastics for fabrication of MFP Copolymers of vinyl chloride & vinyl acetate Properties are superior to those of natural

rubbers in flexibility & resistance to sunlight & aging

Clinical usefulness may extend from 1-6 months

Vinyl plastisol Introduced in 1940. Vinyl resins are relatively rigid in their pure state,

made flexible by addition of plasticizers. In its plastisol stage the material is a thick liquid

formed by dispersion of small vinyl particles in plasticizer BEUMER

Page 31: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Advantages

1. Inexpensive & easy to manipulate2. Can be remade by resoftening & reheating. 3. Hydrophilic properties.

Disadvantages

1. Prosthesis made from plastisol looses its flexibility with aging & become hard & distorted.

2. Degradation & destruction by UV light. 3. Linotype Metal molds are used which are

expensive. 4. Stains easily BEUMER

Page 32: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

3. Elastomers

Elastomers have been used for over 50 years now to fabricate facial prostheses for individuals missing facial anatomy due to resection, trauma or even congenital

anomalies.

BEUMER

Page 33: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

a) Polyurethane elastomer • ……But only

Epithane-3 facial restorations.

3 component system Part A - polyol Part B- isocyanate Part C- initiator such as dibutyltin dilaurate or stannous octate)

Varying amount of isocyanates will change the physical properties of final products.

 

BEUMER

Page 34: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

ADVANTAGES

- They can be made elastic without compromising edge strength.

- Flexibility well suited to defects with movable tissue beds

- Colored extrinsically & intrinsically

- Superior cosmetic results.

DISADVANTAGES

- Difficult to process consistently

- Isocyanate is moisture sensitive & toxic

- The presence of moisture in the air, leads to production of CO₂ resulting in porous elastomer.

BEUMER

Page 35: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Water contamination is difficult to control

Requires thorough dehydration before processing if stone molds are used

Poor compatibility with existing adhesive

systems

Difficulty in clearing adhesive from prosthesis.

Not color stable.

Clinical usefulness less than 6 months ( approx. 3mths.)

BEUMER

Page 36: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Silicone Elastomer

•Properties of silicone

•Disadvantages of silicone

•Classification of silicone

•HTV silicone

•RTV silicone

•Advantages of HTV over RTV

Page 37: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

b) Silicone elastomer The silicon elastomers -- introduced -1946,

Silicones are a combination of organic and inorganic compounds.

The first step in their production is the reduction of silica to elemental silicon.

Then by various reactions the silicon is combined with methyl chloride to form Dimethyl dichloro siloxane, which, when it reacts with water, forms a polymer

BEUMER

Page 38: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Polymers – translucent , watery , white fluids .

Fillers -- additional strength.

Anti-oxidants & vulcanizing agents -- transform the raw mass from a plastic to a rubbery resin during processing

Cross linking makes the silicones especially resistant to degradation from ultra-violet exposure.

BEUMER

Page 39: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Disadvantages of silicones

Poor strength Receive colors poorly or with difficultySome are opaque resulting in prosthesis that

are cold and lifeless.Microbial growthPoor wet abilityGood only with silicone adhesives

Page 40: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Classification of silicone

•Based on the Mechanism

•Acc. to Application

•Based on chemistry

JIADS VOL 1 ISSUE 2 APRIL- JUNE 2005;

Page 41: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Based on the Mechanism

• Room temperature (RTV)

• High temperature (HTV)

Acc.to Application

• Implant grade - FDA requirement

• Medical grade - external use

• Clean grade - packaging

• Industrial grade - industrial applications

Based on chemistry

• Polydimethyl siloxanes

• Methyl vinyl /dimethyl siloxanes

• Phenyl methylsiloxanes

• Fluoro dimethyl siloxanes

Industrial use

JIADS VOL 1 ISSUE 2 APRIL- JUNE 2005;

Page 42: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

HTV Silicone

1. 1 or 2 component system with putty like consistency

2. 2 primary catalysts - platinum salt (addition) and dichlorobenzoyl peroxide (condensation).

3. Filler - very pure, finely divided silica (size 30 -)

4. Processing of heat cured silicones requires sophisticated instrumentation and high temperature.

BEUMER

Page 43: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

• Excellent thermal stability• Biologically inert• Color stable when exposed to

ultraviolet lightAdvantages

• Opaque, lifeless appearance

• Not adequate elasticity in function

• Metal Molds Disadvantage

s

HTV Silicone

Page 44: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

HTV siliconeSilastic S-6508 Silastic 370, 372, 373Silastic 4-4514Silastic 4-4515 MDX 4-4159SE- 4524UQ7- 4635Q7- 4650Q7- 4735 These silicones can be preformed into

various shapes for alloplastic implantation or facial prostheses.

BEUMER. CHALLIAN;

Page 45: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

RTV Silicone Available as clear solutions

A viscous silicone polymer that includes a filler & a catalyst –

Stannous octoate is the most common catalyst .

Fillers usually diatomaceous earths - improve strength, but significant loss of translucency occurs. This problem primarily exists typically with Silastic 382 & 399.

Page 46: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

2 types of RTV

Condensation type

Orthoalkyl silicate cross-linking agent

Stannous octate catalyst

Addition type

Hydro-methyl siloxane cross-linking agent

Chloroplatinic acid catalyst

RTV silicones have increased cure time at room temperature that may be decreased by bringing the temperature to 100 ˚C for approximately 20 min.

Page 47: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

ADVANTAGES:- Color stable

- Biologically inert

- Easier to process

- Retain physical & chemical properties at wide range of temperature

- Stone molds can be used

DISADVANTAGES:- Poor edge strength

- Costly

- Cosmetic appearance of the material -- inferior to that of polyurethanes, acrylic resins, polyvinyl chloride.

Page 48: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

ADVANTAGES OF HTV OVER RTV

1. Less chances of air bubble entrapment, since hand mixing of catalyst & pigments with the elastomer is avoided.

2. Increased tear strength mechanical durability, & chemical resistance.

3. Increased biocompatibility and flexibility

Page 49: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

FOAMING SILICONES

The purpose -- reduce the weight of the prosthesis.

After the silicone is processed, the gas is eventually released leaving a spongy material.

ADV--The formation of the bubbles within the mass can cause the volume to increase by as much as 7 times.

However, the foamed material has reduced

strength and is susceptible to tearing. This weakness can be partially overcome by coating the foam with another silicone

BEUMER

Silastic 386:

Page 50: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Recent Advances

MPDS- Silicone block copolymer

Polyphosphazenes

Silphenylenes

MDX4-4210

Page 51: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

MDX 4 - 4210

Low temperature, vulcanizing silicone polymer

Provided as a two component kit

The polymerization reaction is addition reaction with no by product

Very colour stableJIADS VOL 1 ISSUE 2 APRIL- JUNE 2005;

Page 52: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Advantages of this material

Most importantly it has a high tear strength compared to RTV silicones

Unusually thin edges can be designed in a prosthesis without the risk of damage during wear & removal.

Accelerated aging tests have shown that the elastomer is very color stable.

JIADS VOL 1 ISSUE 2 APRIL- JUNE 2005;

Page 53: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

SilPhenylenesArylene silicone polymer - synthesized &

formulated as a pourable, viscous, RTV liquid

Transparent ,Reinforced with silica fillers. Three component kit –

- Base elastomer,

- Tetrapropoxysilane (cross linking agent)

and

- Organotin catalyst

JIADS VOL 1 ISSUE 2 APRIL- JUNE 2005;

Page 54: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Improved property

Unusual combination of high-tensile strength & low modulous (relative to other conventional RTV silicones)

Improved edge strength

Superior coloration

Feel like skin

JIADS VOL 1 ISSUE 2 APRIL- JUNE 2005; BEUMER

Page 55: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

MPDS -- Silicone Block Copolymers (Methacryloxy propyl-terminated poly dimethyl siloxane)

It is introduced to improve some of the drawbacks of silicone elastomers, such as decreased tear strength, low percent elongation & bacterial growth over prosthesis.

Methacrylate - (ADHEOPHILIC) reduces the hydrophobicity which enhances the adhesive bond strength to non-silicone-based adhesives

Page 56: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Polyphosphazenes

Fluoro elastomer has been developed for use as a resilient denture liner (NovusTM, Hygienic Corp.)

It has the potential to be used as a maxillofacial prosthetic material.

Page 57: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

New organosilicone maxillofacial prosthetic materialsLai, wang, Delong, Hodges.

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the physical properties of new prosthetic materials based on methacryloxypropyl terminatedpolydimethylsiloxane (MPDS-MF) and to compare the properties with those of A-2186.

The hardness of MPDS-MF is similar to A-2186. However, tensile strength, tear strength, ultimate elongation, and adhesive bonding strength of MPDS-MF are higher than those of A-2186

Dental Materials 18 (2002) 281 ±286

Page 58: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Effect of nano-oxide concentration on the mechanical properties of a maxillofacial silicone elastomer,

The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effect of different concentrations of nanosized oxides of various composition on the mechanical properties of a commercially available silicone elastomer.

Nanosized oxides (Ti, Zn, or Ce) were added in various concentrations to a commercial silicone elastomer (A-2186),

Incorporation of Ti, Zn, or Ce nano-oxides at concentrations of 2.0% and 2.5% improved the overall mechanical properties of the silicone A-2186 maxillofacial elastomer.

(J Prosthet Dent 2008;100:465-473)

Page 59: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Coloration…

Page 60: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Coloration Defined as one that has a distribution of pigments

equivalent to that of human skin and whose overall colour appears to change precisely as does that of a human skin under all types of illumination. – Chalian

Coloration of the prosthesis varies with the materials used and the preference of the clinician.

Basic skin tones should be developed into a shade guide for the materials that are used.

The base shade selected should be slightly lighter than the lightest skin tones of the patient because the prosthesis will darken by either extrinsic or intrinsic coloration.

TAYLOR

Page 61: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Coloration techniques can be divided into 3 groups: Extrinsic, intrinsic or combination technique.

The combination technique is widely used because it produces prosthesis with a more natural appearance.

The color match of the prosthesis depends largely on the skill of the clinician, color activity of the individual and light source.

At present the procedure is done using an empirical trial and error method having no standardization for future reference.

TAYLOR

Page 62: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Intrinsic coloration:

Intrinsic coloration is the color applied within the mold during the casting procedure.

A three dimensional quality is

accomplished by incorporating subsurface details such as blood vessels, freckles and moles.

TAYLOR

Page 63: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Knowledge of primary, secondary and complementary colors is helpful in selection of chroma.

Primary ColorSecondary

Color

Complementary

Color

1) Red Red+Yellow=orange Red-Green

2) Yellow Yellow+blue=Green Yellow-Violet

3) Blue Blue+Red=Violet Blue-Orange.

TAYLOR

Page 64: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Spectrophotometers used to measure patient skin color

Kaolin Powder Calcined White G-102 used to create opacity with

silicone products

Basic Skin Pigments for intrinsic stain

Dry Pigments

Flocking / Fibres for intrinsic stains Veins

Page 65: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Accelerated color change in a maxillofacial elastomer with and without pigmentation

This study attempted to determine whether predictable color changes occur when 3 pigments are individually incorporated into a specific silicone elastomer.

The materials included an RTV elastomer; 1 natural inorganic pigment, burnt sienna and 2 synthetic organic pigments, Hansa yellow and alizarin red.

Acceleration was achieved… If left indoors with exposure to normal levels of daylight, the

observed color change of the specimens would likely occur but take more time.

(J Prosthet Dent 2001;85:614-20.)

Page 66: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Once the base color is identified, laminar glazes are applied to simulate the skin complex appearance.

Laminar glazes are layers of color painted into the mould before packing the base color and this is combined with placement of threads and flocks for blood vessel simulation.

Common colors for laminar glazes are: Red bluish glaze . Golden tan glaze Dark brown glaze Opaque Yellow White color Dark blue or purple Opaque, Pink to red helix color

TAYLOR

Page 67: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Base color is compared to patient skin with red bluish glaze , layered over a base color

Red bluish glaze is painted into the first layer of mould

Tweezers and periodontal probe to place thread for blood vessel simulation

Syringe used to inject silicone into the helical group

Instrinsically painted mould prior to packing the base color

Page 68: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read
Page 69: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Extrinsic Coloration:It is more predictable

It should be used sparingly

Apply the extrinsic pigments in small amounts and on the surface of the prosthesis in a stippled fashion. Curing can be done by placing in an air-circulating oven at 90°centigrade.

Additional glazes are applied and cured by using air drier.

TAYLOR

Page 70: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Application of extrinsic color Blending the Seam

Application of kaolin to Compressed air used to

Cured surface of the prosthesis eliminate excess kaolin

TAYLOR

Page 71: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

In vitro evaluation of color change in maxillofacial elastomer through the use of an ultraviolet light absorber and a hindered amine light stabilizer.

This study evaluated color stability when an ultraviolet light absorber and hindered amine light stabilizer were mixed in the maxillofacial elastomer containing either organic or inorganic pigments.

The materials used were an RTV silicone elastomer, 1 natural inorganic dry-earth pigment (burnt sienna) and 2 synthesized organic pigments (hansa yellow and alizarin red), ultraviolet light absorber (UVA) and hindered amine light stabilizer (HALS).

UVA and HALS were shown to be effective in retarding color changes.

J Prosthet Dent. 2004 May;91(5):483-90

Page 72: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Adhesives

Introduction

Classification

Problem with adhesives

Page 73: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Introduction Adhesives are expected to retain prostheses

during ordinary & extreme facial expressions, build-up of sebaceous secretions & water & change of weather conditions.

Most facial prostheses are retained with a medical grade adhesive.

Selection depends -- Biocompatibility, -- Retentive properties -- Ease of applicability -- Removal on daily basis -- Nature of the material from which prosthesis is fabricated. 

BEUMER

Page 74: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Classification of Adhesive Rubber-based liquid adhesives (natural &

latex)Silicone Cyanoacrylates

Page 75: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Pressure-sensitive tape (double-coated polyethylene, 3M surgical tape)

These materials are backing strips composed of cloth, paper, film, foil, or laminate coated with a pressure-sensitive adhesive.

Page 76: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

The bond weaker than that of rubber adhesives.

Advantages - the ease of application & cleaning

after removal. Indication for biphasic tape is with

materials that have poor flexibility & nonmobile tissue beds.

Page 77: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Silicone adhesives(Holister)Are a form of RTV silicone dissolved in

solvent.Once applied, the solvent evaporates & a

tacky surface forms that form bond with another surface

Despite their low adhesive strength, they have good resistance to moisture & weathering with low water sorption

Page 78: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Acrylic resin emulsions(Epithane-3, ProsAide)

Composed of acrylic resin dispersed in water solvent when evaporated, leaves a rubber-like substance.

Other materials -- synthetic rubber, vinyl acetate, reclaimed rubber, vinyl chloride, styrene, & methacrylic

Penetration & wetting -- controlled by addition of surfactants or altering the particle size of the dispersion.

Increasing the viscosity -- prevent penetration into porous surfaces.

Page 79: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Problems with AdhesivesPatients with poor manual dexterity or

coordination may not be able to apply the adhesive or position the prosthesis in a consistent manner.

Margins adjacent to mobile tissue require

constant reattachment with facial movements.

Allergic or irritational responses may persist.

Some aromatic base adhesives may curl thin prosthesis margins.

Page 80: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Poor hygiene limit the wearing of a prosthesis , because of interference with adhesive qualities.

Routine removal of adhesive -- remove the external pigmentation

Page 81: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Limitations of the Maxillofacial Materials…

Page 82: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Limitations …

No single maxillofacial material is ideal for every patient

1. Continued effect of sunlight and vascular dilatation & contraction on the natural tissues cannot be duplicated in the prosthesis.

2. Variations of skin tone when the patient is exposed to different light sources (e.g., incandescent, fluorescent, & natural light) cannot be duplicated in the prosthesis

3. The prosthesis cannot duplicate the full facial movement of the non defective side

Page 83: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

4. Varying physiologic conditions of the patient in everyday living (e.g., lack of sleep, infectious diseases, and edema resulting from interrupted lymph drainage caused by surgery) cannot be duplicated in the prosthesis.

5. Inflammation caused by recent surgery, which subsides with time -- necessitates remaking the prosthesis.

6. Lack of predictability of the life of the prosthesis, because of variations among patients (i.e., secretions, smoking, and environment

Page 84: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

Conclusion…

Page 85: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

References1. “Maxillofacial Prosthetics”, Chalian

2. “Maxillofacial prosthetics” Laney WR

3. “Clinical maxillofacial Prosthetics” Thomas D Taylor

4. Oral and maxillofacial rehabilitation by Buemer.

5. Robert Sanchez, comparision of physical properties of two types of polydimethyl siloxane, MDX4-4210 and new material A-2186 JPD 1992:67(5);679

Page 86: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

6. Effect of nano-oxide concentration on the mechanical properties of a maxillofacial silicone elastomer, Ying Han, DDS, MS,a Sudarat Kiat-amnuay, DDS, MS,b John M.Powers, PhD,c and Yimin Zhao, DDS, PhDd, J Prosthet Dent 2008;100:465-473

7. New organosilicone maxillofacial prosthetic materialsLai, wang, Delong, Hodges, Dental Materials 18 (2002) 281 ±286

8. Accelerated color change in a maxillofacial elastomer with and without pigmentation, John J. Gary, Eugene F. Huget and Larry D. Powell, J Prosthet Dent 2001;85:614-20.

9. In vitro evaluation of color change in maxillofacial elastomer through the use of an ultraviolet light absorber and a hindered amine light stabilizer, J Prosthet Dent,2004 May;91(5):483-90

Page 87: 7.maxillofacial materials.ppt.pptx read

10. An in vivo evaluation of adhesives used in extraoral maxillofacial prostheses.Haug SP, Richard GE, Margiotti E, Winkler MM, Moore DJ, J Prosthodont 1995 Mar;4(1):11-5.

11. . Mechanical behavior of three maxillofacial prosthetic adhesive systems: A pilot project, John F. Wolfaardt, Victor Tam, M.Gary Faulkner, Narasimha Prasad, The journal of prosthetic Dentistry,vol 68;6:December 1992, Pages 943–949

12. . JPD 1984:51(4):523-226.