Computational biomechanics of bone's responses to dental prostheses-osseointegration, remodeling and resorption

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Abstract

Clinical and experimental studies showed that human bone has the ability to remodel itself to better adapt to its biomechanical environment by changing both its material properties and geometry. As a consequence of the rapid development and extensive applications of major dental restorations such as implantation and fixed partial denture (FPD), the effect of bone remodeling on the success of a dental restorative surgery is becoming critical for prosthetic design and pre-surgical assessment. This paper aims to provide a computational biomechanics framework to address dental bone's responses as a result of dental restoration. It explored three important issues of resorption, apposition and osseointegration in terms of remodeling simulation. The published remodeling data in long bones were regulated to drive the computational remodeling prediction for the dental bones by correlating the results to clinical data. It is anticipated that the study will provide a more predictive model of dental bone response and help develop a new design methodology for patient-specific dental prosthetic restoration.

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Li, W., Rungsiyakull, C., Field, C., Lin, D., Zhang, L., Li, Q., & Swain, M. (2014). Computational biomechanics of bone’s responses to dental prostheses-osseointegration, remodeling and resorption. In IOP Conference Series: Materials Science and Engineering (Vol. 10). Institute of Physics Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1088/1757-899X/10/1/012122

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