Mechanical Behavior of Repaired Monolithic Crowns: A 3D Finite Element Analysis

Dent J (Basel). 2023 Oct 31;11(11):254. doi: 10.3390/dj11110254.

Abstract

This study evaluated the mechanical behavior and risk of failure of three CAD-CAM crowns repaired with different resin composites through a three-dimensional (3D) finite element analysis. Three-dimensional models of different cusp-repaired (conventional nanohybrid, bulk-fill, and flowable resin composites) crowns made of zirconia, lithium disilicate, and CAD-CAM resin composite were designed, fixed at the cervical level, and loaded in 100 N at the working cusps, including the repaired one. The models were analyzed to determine the Maximum Principal and Maximum Shear stresses (MPa). Complementary, an in vitro shear bond strength test (n = 10) was performed to calculate the risk of failure for each experimental group. The stress distribution among the models was similar when considering the same restorative material. The crown material affected the stress concentration, which was higher for the ceramic models (±9 MPa for shear stress; ±3 MPa for tensile stress) than for the CAD-CAM composite (±7 MPa for shear stress; ±2 MPa for tensile stress). The shear bond strength was higher for the repaired CAD-CAM resin composite (±17 MPa) when compared to the ceramics (below 12 MPa for all groups), while the repair materials showed similar behavior for each substrate. The stress distribution is more homogenous for repaired resin composite crowns, and a flowable direct resin composite seems suitable to repair ceramic crowns with less risk of failure.

Keywords: ceramic restoration; finite element analysis; glass–ceramic; resin composite; shear bond; stress distribution; zirconium.

Grants and funding

This research was financed by the Brazilian Federal Agency for Coordination of Improvement of Higher Education Personnel—CAPES (process number 888877.17140/2022-00, P.M.S doctorate sandwich scholarship at CAPES/PrInt Program, Smart Materials Project; Finance code 001, P.M.S. and L.S.R. Doctorate’s scholarships), and by the Brazilian National Council for Scientific and Technological Development—CNPq (L.S.R. doctorate sandwich scholarship, Grant #201081/2022-9).