학술논문

Fracture resistance of human incisors and premolars: morphological and patho-anatomical factors.
Document Type
Journal Article
Source
Dental Traumatology. Aug2001, Vol. 17 Issue 4, p167-173. 7p.
Subject
*TEETH
*MOLARS
*CUSPIDS
*INCISORS
*BONE fractures
Language
ISSN
1600-4469
Abstract
305 extracted human front teeth and premolars were investigated for their dynamic resistance to fracture. Morphological factors, such as the anatomical class of tooth and root lengths, and patho-anatomical factors, such as infractions, occlusal and cervical abrasions, composite and amalgam restorations and damage resulting from previous traumatic impacts, were taken into consideration. A comparison of stability after a defined impact stress showed that maxillary canines and premolars had the highest resistance to fracture; this differs significantly from the resistance of maxillary and mandibular incisors. The root length correlates directly with fracture energy and therefore to stability. Composite restorations with an adhesive joint were found to increase the resistance of a tooth to fracture, but amalgam restorations had a weakening effect. Cervical wedge-shaped defects of the tooth cause considerable destabilization, but occlusal abrasion and infractions have only a moderate weakening influence. Previous traumatic stress reduces the resistance to fracture of a tooth by up to 85%. The fracture patterns generated were very similar to clinically observed tooth fractures, indicating the results to be clinically relevant. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]