Introduction: One method to evaluate the clinical success of cemented restorations is measuring the marginal adaptation. There is a correlation between the fitting of the restoration and problems caused by clinically undetectable passage of bacteria between the tooth structure and the veneer.
Aim: To evaluate in comparison the marginal adaptation of veneers produced via CAD/CAM and press technique.
Materials and methods: 32 extracted incisors are divided into two equal-number groups (n=16) according to the production technique - CAD/CAM zirconium veneers and press-ceramic veneers. Cut sections are examined under a SEM magnification. Marginal accuracy is measured as the distance between the finish line of the tooth and the margin of the veneer at eight fixed locations.
Results: The mean values of marginal gap of group 1 are: external adaptation - 79.88±3.71 µm; internal adaptation - 79.14±15.70 µm; cervical adaptation - 82.39±28.55 µm; incisal adaptation - 86.85±21.72 µm. The mean values of marginal gap of group 2 are: external adaptation - 100.31±2.16 µm; for internal adaptation - 101.01±12.51 µm; cervical adaptation - 91.55±3.31 µm; incisal adaptation - 93.76±2.54 µm.
Conclusions: Veneers produced via CAD/CAM technology have better fit at the external and internal marginal wall. There is no statistically significant difference between the gaps at the cervical and the incisal areas.
Keywords: CAD/CAM veneers; marginal adaptation; zirconium veneers.
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