Inlays And Onlays Flashcards

(28 cards)

1
Q

What is inlays and onlays/ whats it about

A

. Indirect restorations
• Processed outside of the mouth – require an impression
• Amount of coronal tooth structure removed due to full coverage crown preparation = 60- 70%
- 40% in the case of occlusal onlay preparation

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2
Q

What’s the advantages of inlays and onlays

A
  • Improved properties of indirect composite vs direct composite
  • Less risk of pulpal damage compared to full crown prep
  • Supra-gingival finishing lines = better plaque control
  • Retention and resistance form less of a problem
  • Improved marginal integrity
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3
Q

What are the indications for inlays and onlays

A

• Volume of tooth needing to be replaced:
ØInlays: small to moderate lesions;
ØOnlays: if already wide isthmus; premolars with no intact marginal ridges; cuspal
replacement/protection

• History of direct restoration failure
• Cuspal protection e.g. following root canal therapy
• Patient preference
• Compliant patient – low caries rate, good OH

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4
Q

contraindications/ requirements for inlays and onlays

A

NOT suitable as partial denture retainer
onlays require intact facial/lingual surfaces

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5
Q

Longeivity of inlays and onlays

A

Ceramic inlays 12.7 years not as good as MOD inlays (20.6) and metal inlays, the MOD and metal similar to crowns

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6
Q

Composite (better) inlays vs ceramic inlays/onlays

A

• Cost
• Aesthetics
• Staining resistance
• Try-in difficulties
• Polishing ability when cemented
• Repair
• Bond strength
• Wear capabilities
• Biocompatibility

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7
Q

Preparation principles

A

• Slightly divergent preparation
• Less retention and resistance form
required – relies on adhesion from luting
cement
• Sharper line angles for gold/metal inlay
or onlay preparations
• Softer line angles for composite or
ceramic inlay or onlay preparations
• Avoid contact of cavo-surface angles
against opposing cusps
• Impression with PVS

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8
Q

Metal inlay/onlay preparations

A

• Usually softer gold alloy, however, etchable base metal alloys may be
used if bonding effect is desired
• Narrow isthmus to minimise stress in the surrounding tooth structure
(1/4 of intercuspal distance)
• Isthmus depth = 1.5mm
• Isthmus should avoid occlusal contact areas
• Inlays for premolars - should have one intact marginal ridge,
otherwise occlusal coverage onlay required
• Inlays result in wedge-effect and risk fracture of unsupported cusp;
also risk cement disruption and microleakage

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9
Q

Ceramic and composite inlays/onlays IPS e.max preparations general guidelines

A

Follow the preparation guidelines and use the minimum layer thickness

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10
Q

All ceramic ips emax

A

No angles or edges
Shoulder preparation with rounded inner edges and/or chamfer preparation

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11
Q

CADCAM fabricated restorations ips emax

A

Incisal edge of preparation should be at least 1mm to allow optimum milling of the incisal area during CADCAM processing

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12
Q

Ips emax inlay/onlay

A

Preparation margins are not in areas of static or dynamic antagonist contacts
Preparation depths at least 1mm and width of isthmus at least 1mm in the tissue area
Proximal box has slightly divergent walls and angle 100-120 degrees between proximal cavity walls and proximal cavity surfaces
Avoid marginal ridge contacts in inlay
Round internal edges in order to prevent stress concentration in the ceramic material
Do not prepare slice cuts or feather edges
At least 1mm space in cusp areas for onlays

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13
Q

Steps in prepping onlay/inlay

A

Open the cavity
Proximal extension
Proximal box preparation
Smooth cavity walls and proximal boxes

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14
Q

Temporisation materials

A

Temphase
Kalzinol
Fuji II/IX

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15
Q
  • I haven’t inlciuded partial crowns because its not on the LO
A
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16
Q

Haven’t included temporisation techniques because it looks over complicated and a waste of time

17
Q

Failures with inlays and onlays can be … or … and what are they

A

Biological…
Endodontic complications
Tooth and/or root fracture
Hypersensitivity
Caries

Technician…
Crack/chipping
Core failure
Poor marginal integrity
Loss of retention

18
Q

For ceramic inlays/onlays survival?

A

Is about 90 percent at 10 years

19
Q

Top reasons for failure of ceramic restorations

A

fracture of the ceramic
marginal discoloration
endodontic complications

20
Q

General principles for onlay/inlay preparation

A

Preserve as much useful tooth structure as possible
Protect the tooth structure that remains
Control the loads upon the restoration and tooth

21
Q

Restorations can be

A

Direct at chairside or indirect ie lab made

22
Q

General considerations for deciding to restore with plastic or indirect restorations

A

Status of the dental pulp
Nature of the occlusion
Wishes of the patient e.g. financial
Isthmus width

23
Q

Isthmus width…

A

the width of the cavity in the isthmus is less than 1/3 of the width of the intercuspal distance then the tooth is suitable for a plastic restoration.
if the width is between 1/3 and ½ of the intercuspal distance then the tooth is suitable for either a plastic or indirect restoration.
if the width is greater than 1/2 of the intercuspal distance then an indirect restoration is the treatment of choice.

24
Q

General stuff for inlays and onlays

A

These are restorations which are processed outside of the mouth prior to fitting intraorally

Historically gold was the material of choice but now modern attitudes for aesthetics have seen preference for tooth coloured materials

25
Differences in preparation for plastic restoration vs indirect onlay/inlay
A plastic filling (such as amalgam) will require a preparation which design features must include resistance and retention form but An Inlay/onlay is retained within the tooth by use of adhesive cements and therefore the preparation shape will have different features.
26
Indications for onlays/inlays
Low caries rate Good oral hygiene Cuspal coverage - onlays weakened teeth root filled posterior teeth previously heavily restored teeth Repeated fracture of a directly placed restoration Expected difficulties in achieving an acceptable contour, contact point or occlusion with a direct restoration
27
What’s important structurally?
For dentine to be remaining at the base of the cusps
28
Fitting techniques for onlays/inlays- emax
Prep- see flashcard for this Then construct a temporary made out of Temphase, Kalzinol or Fuji II or IX Cementation- remove the temp and clean tooth with a polishing brush, + (oil and flouride free paste) Try in permenant restoration, check shade, fit occlusion Use the Multilink Automix try in paste for esthetic inspection-wash off and dry Etch with IPS cermic etching gel- wash off and dry Monobond plus and dry Isolation with rubber dam and clean with polishing brush and oil free and flouride free cleaning paste Mulitlink primer disperse with air Syringe in multilink automix onto restoration and seat onto tooth and apply pressure Remove excess cement Use 'liquid strip' (Air block) to prevent oxygen inhibition Light cure all cementation joints Remove liquid strip Proximal areas finished and polished Varnish- Fluor protector and dry.