You are on page 1of 43

DENTURE

DENTURE BASES
BASES
The denture base is that
part of the denture which
rests on the tissues and
carries the artificial teeth.
Functions
Functions

•• Support
Support & & retain
retain denture
denture teeth
teeth
•• Stress
Stress distribution
distribution
•• Improve
Improve esthetics
esthetics
Requirements
Requirements ofof denture
denture
base
base materials
materials
 11.. Strength
Strength and
and durability
durability
 2.
2. Satisfactory
Satisfactory thermal
thermal properties
properties
 3.
3. Processing
Processing accuracy
accuracy andand dimensional
dimensionalstability
stability
 4.
4. Chemical
Chemical stability
stability (unprocessed
(unprocessed asas well
well as
as processed
processed
material)
material)
 5.
5. Insolubility
Insolubility in
in and
and low
low sorption
sorption of
of oral
oral fluids
fluids
 6.
6. Absence
Absence of of taste
taste and
and odor
odor
 7.
7. Biocompatible
Biocompatible
 8.
8. Natural
Natural appearance
appearance
 9.
9. Color
Color stability
stability
 10.
10. Adhesion
Adhesion to to plastics,
plastics, metals,
metals, and
and porcelain
porcelain teeth
teeth
 11.
11. Ease
Ease of
of fabrication
fabrication and
and repair
repair
 12.
12. Moderate
Moderate cost cost
 Different
Different denture
denture base
base
materials
materials
Material Character
I. Non-Metallic Advantages
1. Heat-cured Polymethyl methacrylate 1.Color matches gingival tissues
(PMMA) 2. Easy constructed & repaired
2. Self-Cure (PMMA) 3. Easy to be finished & polished
3. Light cure (PMMA) 4. Easy to reline
4. Pour-type denture base resin (fluid 5. Light in weight
resin), chemical cure 6. Not expensive
5. High-impact strength material
(rubber-reinforced), heat cure Disadvantages
6. Rapid-heat polymerized acrylic, 1.Moderate mechanical properties
7. Hydrophilic Polyacrylate. 2.Could be scratched
8. Soft acrylic. 3.Do not transmit heat
 
4.May cause allergy to the patient
5.Crazing & bleaching may occur
6.Bacterial & fungal colonization may
occur
Material Character

II. Metallic materials Advantages


1.Cast gold alloys 1.High mechanical properties
2.Cast cobalt-chromium 2.Could not be scratched
3.Cast titanium & titanium alloy 3.Transmit heat
4.Swaged stainless-steel 4.Minimal allergy to the patient
5.Crazing not occur
6.Minimal bacterial & fungal
colonization

Disadvantages
1. Color not matches gingival tissues
2. Not easy constructed & repaired
3. Not easy to be finished & polished
4. Not easy to reline
5. Heavy in weight
6. Relatively expensive
7. Corrosion may occur
Heat-cured
Heat-cured acrylic
acrylic denture
denture
base
base
 Physical
Physical form
form and
and composition
composition
 Denture
Denture base
base plastics
plastics are
are commonly
commonly
supplied
supplied in
in aa powder-liquid
powder-liquid form
form
Principle
Principle ingredient
ingredient of
of acrylic
acrylic denture
denture base
base
1. Heat-cured polymethyl methacrylate
a. Powder

Pre polymerized polymethyl methacrylate in the form of

small beads.

Initiator: benzoyl peroxide.

Plasticizers: dibutyl phthalate to soften the material and make

it more flexible.
Pigments: various tissue like shades.

Acrylic fibers: simulate the minute blood vessels.

Glass fibers: to increase the stiffness.

Barium salts: improve the radiopacity of the polymer.


b. Liquid (present in dark glass bottle)

Monomer: methyl methacrylate.

Inhibitor: to prevent premature polymerization which is

hydroquinone.

Cross-linkage agent: glycol dimethacrylate to decrease

the solubility and water sorption and increase the

resistance to minute surface cracking or crazing.


Denture base construction using compression
molding technique

1. Flasking procedure

2. Wax elimination

3. Proportioning and mixing


Polymer / Monomer ratio

•The proportion of polymer to monomer is 3:1 by volume and


2:1 by weight.

• The powder and liquid are mixed with stainless steel spatula
and kept in a sealed glass jar during the initial stages of reaction
to avoid the loss of the monomer by evaporation. A plastic mass
is produced after mixing.
On standing this workable mass pass
through five stage:
1. Sandy stage
The polymer gradually settles into the monomer and a
some what fluid incoherent mass is formed which is
grainy.

2. Stringy or sticky stage


The monomer attaches the surface of the polymer beads.
This stage is characterized by a stringiness and
adhesiveness if the mixture is touched or pulled apart.
3. Dough stage
The monomer diffuses into the polymer gradually and the mass
becomes more saturated with polymer in solution, it becomes
smooth and dough like. It is no longer tacky and does not adhere to
the wall of the mixing jar.

4. Rubbery stages
The monomer disappears by evaporation and by further
penetration into the polymer. The mass becomes more
cohesive and rubber like.

5. Stiff stage
Evaporation of free monomer.
During the various stages, the reaction is physical in
nature and include solution of polymer in monomer and
some absorption of monomer by the polymer as well as
wetting of the polymer particles.

4. Packing

5. Trial closure

6. Curing
Curing
The curing cycle described the heating processes employed to control
polymerization reaction of the dough, to transform methyl methacrylate
to polymethyl methacrylate.

Curing cycles are divided into 2 main groups:

1. Short curing cycle (about 2.5 hours)


Put the flask in a water bath and increase the temperature gradually from

room temperature to 65 ᵒC within 30 minutes and keep at 75 ᵒC for


one and half hour, then keep at boiling for 30 minutes.
2. Long curing cycle (about 9 hours)

Put the flask in a water bath, then the temperature is raised gradually to 65 ᵒC
within 30 minutes, then the temperature is raised to 80 ᵒC
within 8 hours and kept at boiling for 30 minutes. Usually long curing
cycle is used for curing bulky prosthetic appliance.
Importance of the boiling stage
•It is important to reduce the level of residual monomer in
the finished denture,
•to complete polymerization
•to reduce the allergic effect of residual monomer.
Excessive boiling is contraindicated as the resin becomes
brittle and easily broken.

7. Deflasking and finishing

8. Polishing
Steps of the polymerization reaction:
1. Initiation
2. Propagation
3. Termination
Direct coupling or by chain transfer
Defects which may occur during processing of
heat-cured polymethyl methacrylate:

A. Porosity

B. Crazing

C. Warpage
A. Porosity
Small voids which may be present internally or externally on the surface of
the denture.

1. Internal porosity
Causes
-If large mass of the resin is heated within the flask, the temperature in the center
of the resin will rise. The resin and plaster or stone are both bad conductors of heat,
so they can not dissipate all the elevated heat away from the center of the bulky
resin. The temperature at the center of the resin rises above the boiling point of the
monomer (100.30 0C) leading to formation of bubbles or pores.

Site
-In the upper denture, at thick portions as tuberosity.
-In the lower denture, in the bulky portions of the lingual flanges.
2. Gaseous porosity
Cause
Any excessive or elevated curing temperature which lead to boiling
of the monomer as in internal porosity.
Site
It appears on the superficial surface of the denture.
N.B: Gaseous porosity is usually accompanied by internal porosity.

3. Contraction porosity
Causes
-Decrease the powder/ monomer ratio
-Lack of pressure during packing and curing
-Under packing (small amount of dough is used in the mold).
Site
At the edges of the flanges of the denture.
4. Granular porosity

Causes

-Increase powder/monomer ratio

-Packing in sandy stage

Site

It appears on the surface of thin areas of the denture.


How can porosity be avoided ?

-Proper proportion of polymer and monomer

-Proper mixing leading to homogeneity of the mass

-The glass jar must be cool all the time mixing is done

-Never pack at any stage other than the dough stage

-Under packing may lead to tooth contraction and granular

porosity

-Too rapid rise of heating temperature may lead to both types

of porosity internal and gaseous.


B. Warpage
Warpage or distortion is the change of the final shape of the upper or

lower denture due to dimensional changes and release of internal stresses.


Causes
-Opening of the flask before cooling
-Too rapid cooling of the flask in tap water
-Excessive heating release during polishing, repair by heat cure.
-Excessive pressure during processing of heat cured PMMA resin when the
temperature is about 70 0C, the polymer monomer mix, expands thermally. If the
flask is clamped rigidly, such expansion of the resin must be compensated for by
enlargement of the mold space.
C. Crazing
Crazing is small linear cracks that appear to originate at denture’s
surface, may result from stress application or partial dissolution of a
resin. It begins at the surface of a resin and oriented at right angles
to tensile forces due to separation of individual polymer chains.

Causes
1. Solvent-induced crazing result from prolonged contact with
liquids as ethyl alcohol.
2. Alternative drying and wetting of the denture.
3. Thermal stresses as a result of differences in coefficient of
thermal expansion between acrylic denture base and porcelain teeth.
Chemical-cured
Chemical-cured acrylic
acrylic
denture
denture plastics
plastics
 Called
Called self-curing
self-curing,, cold-curing
cold-curing or or
autopolymerizing
autopolymerizing resinsresins..
 ItIt has
hasthe
thesame
samecomposition
compositionas as that
that of
of heat-cured
heat-cured
acrylic
acrylicdenture
denturebase,
base, but
but some
somedifferences
differencesexist
exist


 The
The powder
powdercontains
containspolymers
polymersbeads
beadsof
oflow
low
molecular
molecular weight.
weight.


 The
The liquid
liquid contains
containsaachemical
chemical activator
activatorwhich
whichisis
responsible
responsible for forstarting
starting the
thepolymerization
polymerization reaction
reaction
atat room
room temperature
temperatureas astertiary
tertiaryamine
amine that
that reacts
reacts
with
with thethe peroxide
peroxideinitiator
initiator and
andsufficient
sufficient free
free
radicals
radicals areareproduced
producedto toinitiate
initiate the
thepolymerization
polymerization
reaction.
reaction.
Differences
Differences between
between heat
heat and
and
chemical
chemical cured
cured acrylics
acrylics
Difference Heat-cured Chemical-cured
Addition polymerization Addition polymerization
Polymerization reaction activated by heating starts at room temp. in
presence of amine
system
Degree of polymerization Higher due to heating Lower

Polymerization shrinkage Higher Lower

Residual monomer Lower Higher


content 0.2-0.5% 3-5%

Mechanical properties Higher Lower

Water sorption Lower Higher

Color stability Good Discoloration due to


oxidation of tertiary
amine
Dimensional *Under size (0.3- *Over size (0.1%).
changes after 0.4%). *Polymerization shrinkage
several months of *Polymerization *Relief of internal stresses
service shrinkage
*Thermal shrinkage
*Relief of internal
stresses

Practicability -Long processing time -Short processing time (10-15 min.)


(2-8 hours). -Compression or fluid resin tech could be
-Compression or used
injection molding
tech. could be used

Applications Making permanent Denture bases, repair of broken dentures


denture bases and and special trays
removable
orthodontic
appliances
Advantages
Advantages
 Denture
Denturebase
basefabrication
fabricationin
inshort
shorttime
time
 Dimensional
Dimensionalaccuracy
accuracy

Disadvantages
Disadvantages
 Lower
Lowermechanical
mechanicalproperties
propertiesasasstiffness
stiffness
 Higher
Higherporosity
porosity
 Color
Colorinstability
instabilitywhich
whichcan
canbebereduced
reducedby bythe
theaddition
additionof
of
stabilizing
stabilizingagent
agent
 Higher
Higherresidual
residualmonomer
monomerthat thatcould
couldirritate
irritatethe
thepatient’s
patient’ssoft
soft
tissues
tissuesand
andact
actas
asplasticizer
plasticizerthat
thatresult
resultinindecreased
decreasedtransverse
transverse
strength
strength
Light-activated
Light-activated acrylic
acrylic resin
resin
Applications
Applications
 Denture
Denture bases,
bases, repair
repair of
of broken
broken
dentures
dentures and
and special
special trays.
trays.
 AA sheet
sheet of
of the
the material
material isis adapted
adapted to to the
the
working
working cast
cast and
and cured
cured for
for 55 min.
min. in
in aa
light-curing
light-curing unit
unit (Triad).
(Triad). The
The rope
rope
material
material isis adapted
adapted as as horse
horse shoe
shoe over
over
the
the cured
cured base
base and
and the
the artificial
artificial teeth
teeth
are
are arranged
arranged over
over it.
it. Curing
Curing forfor another
another
55 min
min occur.
occur.
Advantages
Advantages

 No
NoMMA
MMAmonomer
monomerfound
found→→reducing
reducingthe
thepossibility
possibility
of
ofallergic
allergicreaction.
reaction.

 Lower
Lowerrate
rateof
ofpolymerization
polymerizationreaction→
reaction→better
better
fitness
fitnessof
ofdenture
denturebase.
base.

 Short
Shortprocessing
processingtime
timewith
withno
noneed
needfor
forflasking.
flasking.

Disadvantages
Disadvantages
 Lower
Lowermechanical
mechanicaland
andphysical
physicalproperties
properties
When patients are known to have suffered
from an allergic reaction
 Processing the denture for extended periods (such as 24
versus 8 hours) may be helpful.

 Processing heat polymerized poly (methyl methacrylate)


in a water bath for 7 hours at 70" C, followed by boiling for 1
hour. Boiling has only a slight effect on the dimensional
accuracy of the processed dentures.

 Vinyl acrylic or light-activated denture base materials are


an alternative for those patients who are sensitive to methyl
methacrylate monomer.
Polymerization shrinkage
 
 The density of methyl methacrylate monomer is only
0.945 g/cm3 at 20º C, compared with 1.16 to 1.18 g/cm3 for
poly (methyl methacrylate).

 This increase in density is mainly accounted for by an


approximate 21% decrease in volume of monomer during
polymerization.

 Because the ratio of polymer to monomer used in the


preparation of dental poly(methyl methacrylates) and
polyvinyl acrylics is usually 3: 1, the free volumetric
shrinkage amounts to approximately 6%
 

You might also like