Wear resistance of injection-molded thermoplastic denture base resins

Authors

  • Ippei Hamanaka Division of Removable Prosthodontics, Fukuoka Dental College, Fukuoka, Japan
  • Misa Iwamoto Division of Removable Prosthodontics, Fukuoka Dental College, Fukuoka, Japan
  • Lippo V. J. Lassila Department of Biomaterials Science, Turku Clinical Biomaterials Centre – TCBC, Institute of Dentistry, University of Turku, Turku, Finland
  • Pekka K. Vallittu Department of Biomaterials Science, Turku Clinical Biomaterials Centre – TCBC, Institute of Dentistry, University of Turku, Turku, Finland; ; Division for Welfare, City of Turku, Turku, Finland
  • Yutaka Takahashi Division of Removable Prosthodontics, Fukuoka Dental College, Fukuoka, Japan

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3109/23337931.2015.1135747

Keywords:

Nanoindentation, polyamide, polyester

Abstract

Objective This study investigated the wear resistance of injection-molded thermoplastic denture base resins using nanoindentation instrument.

Materials and methods Six injection-molded thermoplastic denture base resins (two polyamides, two polyesters, one polycarbonate, one polymethylmethacrylate [PMMA]) and a PMMA conventional heat-polymerized denture-based polymer control were tested. Elastic modulus, hardness, wear depth, and roughness were calculated using a nanoindentation instrument.

Results Elastic modulus and hardness of the injection-molded thermoplastic denture base resins were significantly lower than those of the PMMA conventional heat-polymerized denture-based polymer. Wear depth of polycarbonate and PMMA conventional heat-polymerized denture-based polymer were significantly higher than that of other injection-molded thermoplastic denture base resins. The roughness of injection-molded thermoplastic denture base resins was significantly more than that of PMMA conventional heat-polymerized denture-based polymer after testing.

Conclusions Wear resistance of injection-molded thermoplastic denture base was low compared to PMMA conventional heat-polymerized denture-based polymers.

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Published

2016-12-19

How to Cite

Hamanaka, I., Iwamoto, M., Lassila, L. V. J., Vallittu, P. K., & Takahashi, Y. (2016). Wear resistance of injection-molded thermoplastic denture base resins. Biomaterial Investigations in Dentistry, 2(1), 31–37. https://doi.org/10.3109/23337931.2015.1135747