Three-dimensional accuracy of different impression techniques for dental implants
Abstract
Background: Accurate impression making is an essential prerequisite for achieving a passive fi t
between the implant and the superstructure. The aim of this in vitro study was to compare the
three-dimensional accuracy of open-tray and three closed-tray impression techniques.
Materials and Methods: Three acrylic resin mandibular master models with four parallel implants
were used: Biohorizons (BIO), Straumann tissue-level (STL), and Straumann bone-level (SBL).
Forty-two putty/wash polyvinyl siloxane impressions of the models were made using open-tray and
closed-tray techniques. Closed-tray impressions were made using snap-on (STL model), transfer
coping (TC) (BIO model) and TC plus plastic cap (TC-Cap) (SBL model). The impressions were
poured with type IV stone, and the positional accuracy of the implant analog heads in each dimension
(x, y and z axes), and the linear displacement (ΔR) were evaluated using a coordinate measuring
machine. Data were analyzed using ANOVA and post-hoc Tukey tests (α = 0.05).
Results: The ΔR values of the snap-on technique were signifi cantly lower than those of TC and
TC-Cap techniques (P < 0.001). No signifi cant differences were found between closed and open
impression techniques for STL in Δx, Δy, Δz and ΔR values (P = 0.444, P = 0.181, P = 0.835 and
P = 0.911, respectively).
Conclusions: Considering the limitations of this study, the snap-on implant-level impression
technique resulted in more three-dimensional accuracy than TC and TC-Cap, but it was similar to
the open-tray technique.
Key Words: Dental implants, dental impression materials, dental impression technique
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