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      Clinical use of duplicate complete dentures: A narrative review

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          Abstract

          Most reports on duplicate dentures are introduction to fabrication methods or clinical case reports. Only a few studies have verified their clinical effectiveness; hence, evidence to construct useful clinical guidelines for duplicate denture use is lacking. This review aimed to comprehensively investigate reports on duplicate dentures to accumulate evidences that will contribute to the formulation of clinical practice guidelines. Duplicate dentures are effectively used for impression making and bite registration when fabricating new dentures, thereby reducing the number of clinic visits and treatment time. Duplicate denture can also be used as temporary or new dentures. Older people in whom various adaptive abilities have declined, may find it difficult to adjust to new dentures and experience stress, even if the shape is appropriate. Duplicate dentures, which reproduces the shape of old dentures that they are used to, have the advantage of being more familiar to older people and less stressful. When manufacturing duplicate dentures, digital methods such as milling and three-dimensional printing are superior to conventional methods regarding working time and cost. A notable advantage of the digital method is that the denture shape can be saved as digital data, and the denture can be easily duplicated if lost.

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          Most cited references49

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          CAD-CAM milled versus rapidly prototyped (3D-printed) complete dentures: An in vitro evaluation of trueness

          Complete dentures fabricated by computer-aided design and computer-aided manufacturing (CAD-CAM) techniques have become popular. The 2 principal CAD-CAM techniques, milling and rapid prototyping (3D printing), used in the fabrication of complete dentures have been reported to yield clinically acceptable results. However, clinical trials or in vitro studies that evaluated the accuracy of the 2 manufacturing techniques are lacking.
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            CAD/CAM fabricated complete dentures: concepts and clinical methods of obtaining required morphological data.

            The clinical impression procedures described in this article provide a method of recording the morphology of the intaglio and cameo surfaces of complete denture bases and also identify muscular and phonetic locations for the prosthetic teeth. When the CAD/CAM technology for fabricating complete dentures becomes commercially available, it will be possible to scan the denture base morphology and tooth positions recorded with this technique and import those data into a virtual tooth arrangement program where teeth can be articulated and then export the data to a milling device for the fabrication of the complete dentures. A prototype 3-D tooth arrangement program is described in this article that serves as an example of the type of program than can be used to arrange prosthetic teeth virtually as part of the overall CAD/CAM fabrication of complete dentures.
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              Evaluation of the trueness and tissue surface adaptation of CAD-CAM mandibular denture bases manufactured using digital light processing

                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Jpn Dent Sci Rev
                Jpn Dent Sci Rev
                The Japanese Dental Science Review
                Elsevier
                1882-7616
                2213-6851
                14 June 2024
                December 2024
                14 June 2024
                : 60
                : 190-197
                Affiliations
                [a ]Division of Advanced Prosthetic Dentistry, Tohoku University Graduate School of Dentistry, 4–1 Seiryo-machi, Aoba-ku, Sendai, Miyagi 980–8575, Japan
                [b ]Division of Pediatric Dentistry, Nagasaki University Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, 1–7–1 Sakamoto, Nagasaki 852–8588, Japan
                [c ]Department of Prosthetic Dentistry, Ohu University School of Dentistry, 31–1 Misumido, Tomita, Koriyama, Fukushima 963–8611, Japan
                Author notes
                [* ]Corresponding author. nobuhiro.yoda.e2@ 123456tohoku.ac.jp
                Article
                S1882-7616(24)00011-5
                10.1016/j.jdsr.2024.05.005
                11225648
                d40f584f-af91-4d99-8daf-67d33df8b1e9
                © 2024 The Authors

                This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

                History
                : 8 February 2024
                : 1 May 2024
                : 21 May 2024
                Categories
                Article

                duplicate denture,3d printing,cad-cam
                duplicate denture, 3d printing, cad-cam

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