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Denture Base Polymers

Dr. Affan Ahmad

Denture

Denture Base

An articial substitute for missing natural teeth and adjacent tissues. The part of a denture that rests on the foundation tissues and to which teeth are attached. Any substance of which a denture base may be made.

Denture Base Material

Polymer

A chemical compound consisting of large organic molecules built by repetition of smaller monomeric units Resin A broad term used to describe natural or synthetic substances that form plastic materials after polymerization.

Materials Used
Carved Ivory Carved wood Vulcanite Highly crossed linked Acrylics

Requirements of denture base polymers


Should be capable of matching the appearance of the natural oral soft tissues. Should have a value of glass transition temperature (Tg) which is high enough to prevent softening and distortion during use. Should have good dimensional stability in order that the shape of the denture does not change over a period of time. Should have a low value of specific gravity in order that dentures should be as light as possible.

Should have a high value of thermal conductivity would enable the denture wearer to maintain a healthy oral mucosa and to retain a normal reaction to hot and cold stimuli. Should be radiopaque. A high value of modulus of elasticity is advantageous and is also desirable. Should have sufficient flexural strength to resist fracture. Should have an adequate fatigue life and a high value of fatigue limit. The ability of a denture base to resist fracture is a function of the impact strength of the material. Should have sufficient abrasion resistance to prevent excessive wear of material by abrasive denture cleansers or foodstuffs.

Should be chemically inert. Should be insoluble in oral fluids. Should not absorb water or saliva since this may alter the mechanical properties of the material and cause the denture to become unhygienic. Should not be harmful to the technician involved in its handling. The set denture base material should be nontoxic and non-irritant to the patient. Water sorption > Base should not be able to sustain the growth of bacteria or fungi.

Should be relatively inexpensive and have a long shelf life so that material can be purchased in bulk and stored without deteriorating. The material should be easy to manipulate and fabricate. Cheap processing equipment. Should be easy to repair.

Acrylic resin (polymethyl methacrylate) PMMA Why? Desirable qualities reasons why it is used nowadays- :
Good esthetics Cheap Easy to process & use

The material of choice?

Disadvantages:
Not strong enough especially impact strength (denture fall accidentally
and it is broken easily)

Susceptible to distortion with time Low thermal conductivity leads to the pt frequently burning the mucosa
as they dont actually feeling the heat immediately.

Radiolucent > so they include opacifiers to the composition to make it


radio-opaque.

Classification of denture base polymers according to ISO 1567.


Type
1 1 2 2 3 4 5

Class
1 2 1 1

Description
Heat-processing polymers, powder and liquid Heat-processed (plastic cake) Autopolymerised polymers, powder and liquid Autopolymerised polymers (powder and liquid pour type resins) Thermoplastic blank or powder Light-activated materials Microwave-cured material

Composition of Heat cured Material


Powder:
Beads or granules of PMMA so they are already polymerized not monomers. Initiator: benzoyl peroxide Pigments Opacifiers: titanium/zinc oxide to make it radio-opac Plasticiser: dibutyl phthalate to make the material softer, added flexibility. Synthetic fibers: nylon/acrylic to look like blood vessels small blood vesselsto give the gingiva a natural appearance.

Liquid:
Methyl methacrylate monomer Cross-linking agent: ethylene glycol dimethacrylate. This component improves mechanical properties add strength. Inhibitor: Hydroquinone

Composition of Self cured Material


Powder Polymer: Polymethylmethacrylate beads Initiator: A peroxide such as benzoyl peroxide (approximately 0.5%) Pigments Salts of cadmium or iron or organic dyes Liquid Monomer: Methylmethacrylate Cross-linking agent: Ethylene glycol dimethacrylate (approximately 10%) Inhibitor: Hydroquinone (trace) Activator: N N-dimethyl-p-toluidine (approximately 1%)

Processing
Mixing and curing (heat curing materials)
Powder/liquid ratio of 2.5 : 1 by weight If the powder/liquid ratio is too high the mix becomes dry . unmanageable will not flow when placed under pressure in the gypsum mould. Very high powder/liquid ratio Evaporation of monomer (if container is not covered by lid. >Granular porosity > blotchy, opaque surface. sandy stringy doughy rubbery hard

Packing
Two part gypsum mould

Contraction porosity. Insufficient dough Insufficient pressure Curing Water bath or air owen Curing Cycle Heat the flask containing dough for seven hours at 70oC Three hours at 100oC. The final three hours at 100oC

Modified acrylic materials


To improve the impact strength acrylic elastomer copolymer e.g. methylmethacrylate-butadiene methylmethacrylate-butadiene-styrene To improve fatigue resistance Fiber reinforcement > Carbon fiber inserts, aramid, polyethylene and glass fibres. Polypara-phenylene terephthlalamide can be woven to produce a commercial material (Kevlar). To improve radioopacity Barium sulphate

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