Abutment
Abutment
Abutment
Abutment is the natural tooth or root which will carry the retainers of the bridge
The superstructure which is connected to the implant body and carry the final restoration
The function of the abutment is to transmit the occlusal forces falling on it to the periodontium.
Act as an anchors for the bridge.
Ideal abutment should fulfill certain requirements : 1- provides adequate retention and resistance to the restoration without scarifying much of tooth tissues.( needs less tooth reduction) 2- Has a proper C/R ratio and healthy periodontal support.
3- Should has a good axial inclination. Teeth with more than 25are contraindicated for fixed prosthodontics.
4- With vital pulp. The size of the pulp may alter the type of retainer. 5- Esthetics can be achieved easily.
Not always the teeth available for selection are of favorable condition. Questionable abutment is that tooth which does not fulfill one or more of the previous requirements.
while
abutments in straight line resist MD. Forces only . The order in preference for teeth as abutments is:U&L 6
I- Abutment of inadequate amount of sound tooth structure: a) Peg shaped lateral incisor .it is indicated for complete coverage restoration.
Normal Pulp
Large Pulp
Dentinogensis imperfecta
Malformed
teeth.
Before
After
-Abutments with questionable C/R ratio a- Bone resorption b- Over eruption c- Soft tissue hyperplasia d- Attrition E- gingival recession.
Teeth that associated with pathological lesion and need apicectomy
gingival hyperplasia
Abutments with questionable C/R ratio: Bone resorption violate C/R ratio
Teeth associated with pathological lesion which need apicectomy, hemisectioning or surgical extraction
ROOT CONFIGURATION: and oval cross section root is more stable than circular ,diverge roots more preferred than fused one.
OCCLUSION
Any abnormality in the alignment of the abutment means mal-occlusion,which affects the type of the retainer as well as the amount of reduction. Premature contact will induce more than average
Malaligned Abutments
1-MESIALY INCLINED MOLAR
2-ROTATED TOOTH
3-SUPRAERUPTED TOOTH
Normal alignment
Mal-alignment
This fixed partial denture will not seat because the tooth distal to the fixed partial denture intrudes on the path of insertion
Fixed partial denture using a proximal half crown as a retainer on a tilted molar abutment
Fixed partial denture using a telescope crown and coping as a retainer on a tilted molar abutment.
A nonrigid connector on the distal aspect of the premolar retainer compensates for the inclination of the tilted molar.
Span length
The span length or the no. of missing teeth affects the no. of used abutments in the bridge. The degree of deflection of a bridge is directly proportional to the no. of missing teeth ( cube of span length) Fixed partial denture will bends one time if one tooth is missing ,while it bends 8 times if two teeth are missing. In case of long span bridge , we must take a secondary abutments which should not be weak or badly decayed or endodonticaly treated but has the nearly same strength as the principle abutments.
There is one unit of deflection (X) for a given span length (p)
The deflection will be 8 times as great (8X) if the span length is doubled (2p).
The deflection of a fixed partial denture is proportional to the cube of the length of its span.
A, A single pontic will deflect a small amount (D) when subjected to a certain force (F). B, Two pontics will deflect 23 times as much (8 D) to the same force C, Three pontics will deflect 33 times as much (27 D).
Periodontium
The periodontal membrane area of the abutments must be equal or more than the missing teeth. Larger teeth have larger surface area that make them more capable to withstand added stress (Antys Law)
Any mobility in the abutment means additional abutments to be used (secondary abutment)
Congenital defects
Cleft palate(mobile central incisors with bone loss)
The preoperative condition following surgical treatment
The prepared teeth. Two abutments in each buccal segment are used together with the two teeth in the pre maxilla
Spring cantilever bridge Abutments are remote from the edentulous span ( this is an old type of bridge and rarely used now) Cantilever bridge , never use lateral incisors nor endodonticaly treated teeth as abutments for cantilever bridge.
Pier Abutment
Definition: it is that tooth with edentulous space mesial & distal to it. Teeth in anterior segment move in facio-lingual direction, while in posterior segment the teeth tend to move in mesio-distal direction. A five units bridge with upper canine as pier abutment is an example of a bridge subjected to complex forces A rigid fixed-fixed bridge is less than ideal solution. Because it will tend to exert much forces on this pier abutment.
The solution is fixed removable bridge(a bridge with non rigid connector on the distal side of the retainer)
If a nonrigid connector is placed on the distal side of the retainer on a middle abutment, movement in a mesial direction will seat the key into the keyway
If a nonrigid connector is placed on the mesial side of the middle abutment, mesially directed movement will unseat the key.
The problem is obtaining a common path of insertion between anterior teeth inclined in fronto-axial direction 1 and 2 and posterior teeth parallel to this long axis (4) this needs severe reduction on the labial surface of anterior teeth.
Missing 3
Solutions:
Implant. .1 Fixed fixed bridge on 1,2 & 4. .2 The bridge will move labially leaving on .3 open contact distal to the 4 so we use 5 or 1 as an added abutment and the 1 is preferred not to end the bridge on weak abutment. Fixed fixed bridge 2 & 4 only if the .4 opposing is partial or complete denture. Fixed free bridge (cantilever) on 5, 4. .5 Use partial coverage retainers for the anterior teeth with no reduction for the labial surface.
Missing 3
1. Implant 2. Fixed fixed bridge on 4 & 2 (use 1 or 5 as added abutment)
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