Coherent synchrotron-based micro-imaging employed for studies of micro-gap formation in dental implants

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Abstract

Biocompatible materials such as titanium are regularly applied in oral surgery. Titanium-based implants for the replacement of missing teeth demand a high mechanical precision in order to minimize micro-bacterial leakage, especially when two-piece concepts are used. Synchrotron-based hard x-ray radiography, unlike conventional laboratory radiography, allows high spatial resolution in combination with high contrast even when micro-sized features in such highly attenuating objects are visualized. Therefore, micro-gap formation at interfaces in two-piece dental implants with the sample under different mechanical loads can be studied. We show the existence of micro-gaps in implants with conical connections and study the mechanical behavior of the mating zone of conical implants during loading. The micro-gap is a potential source of implant failure, i.e., bacterial leakage, which can be a stimulus for an inflammatory process. © 2011 American Institute of Physics.

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Rack, T., Zabler, S., Rack, A., Stiller, M., Riesemeier, H., Cecilia, A., & Nelson, K. (2010). Coherent synchrotron-based micro-imaging employed for studies of micro-gap formation in dental implants. In AIP Conference Proceedings (Vol. 1365, pp. 445–448). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.3625398

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