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- Poliklinik für Zahnärztliche Prothetik (46) (remove)
The occlusal design plays a decisive role in the fabrication of dental restorations. Dentists and dental technicians depend on mechanical simulations of mandibular movement that are as accurate as possible, in particular, to produce interference-free yet chewing-efficient dental restorations. For this, kinetic data must be available, i.e., movements and deformations under the influence of forces and stresses. In the present study, so-called functional data were collected from healthy volunteers to provide consistent information for proper kinetics. For the latter purpose, biting and chewing forces, electrical muscle activity and jaw movements were registered synchronously, and individual magnetic resonance tomograms (MRI) were prepared. The acquired data were then added to a large complex finite element model of the complete masticatory system using the functional information obtained and individual anatomical geometries so that the kinetics of the chewing process and teeth grinding could be realistically simulated. This allows developing algorithms that optimize computer-aided manufacturing of dental prostheses close to occlusion. In this way, a failure-free function of the dental prosthesis can be guaranteed and its damage during usage can be reduced or prevented even including endosseous implants.
As yet, there are still no evidence-based clinical diagnostic and management guidelines for ambulatory single-channel EMG devices, like the BUTLER® GrindCare® (GrindCare), that are used in patients with sleep bruxism. Therefore, a consensus meeting was organised with GrindCare developers, researchers, and academic and non-academic clinicians experienced with the use of ambulatory EMG devices. The aim of the meeting was to discuss and develop recommendations for clinical guidelines for GrindCare usage, based on the existing clinical and research experience of the consensus meeting's participants. As an important outcome of the consensus meeting, clinical guidelines were proposed in which an initial 2-week baseline phase with the device in its inactive (non-stimulus) mode for habituation and assessment of the number of jaw-muscle activities is followed by a 4-week active phase with contingent electrical stimuli suppressing the jaw-muscle activities. As to avoid the commonly reported reduction in sensitivity to the stimuli, a 2-week inactive phase is subsequently installed, followed by a repetition of active and inactive phases until a lasting reduction in the number of jaw-muscle activities and/or associated complaints has been achieved. This proposal has the characteristics of a single-patient clinical trial. From a research point of view, adoption of this approach by large numbers of GrindCare users creates a great opportunity to recruit relatively large numbers of study participants that follow the same protocol.
Ziel der Arbeit war es, den Einfluss der Platzierung der Restauration im Rohling auf die mechanischen Eigenschaften und die Scherfestigkeit zu dualhärtenden Befestigungskompositen zu untersuchen sowie Unterschiede in der Bruchfestigkeit zwischen zwei Multilayerkeramiken zu ermitteln.
Material und Methodik: Es wurden 160 zylindrische Prüfkörper aus der Multilayerkeramik Katana Zirconia ML hergestellt, um mechanische Eigenschaften wie Dichte, Biegefestigkeit und Härte zu bestimmen. Eine Gruppe wurde künstlich gealtert. Die Bruchfestigkeit von 32 Kronen (Katana Zirconia ML, Ceramill Zolid FX Multilayer) wurde vor und nach thermischer sowie mechanischer Belastung untersucht. Zur Bestimmung der Scherfestigkeit wurden 512 quadratische Prüfkörper hergestellt, die verschiedenen thermischen Belastungen ausgesetzt wurden. Die Scherfestigkeit wurde mit einer Universalprüfmaschine bestimmt und die Brucharten (adhäsiv, kohäsiv, gemischt) wurden analysiert.
Ergebnisse: Es gab keinen signifikanten Unterschied zwischen den Schichten oder der Alterung bei Dichte, Biegefestigkeit und Härte. Katana Zirconia ML zeigte höhere Bruchfestigkeit als Ceramill Zolid FX Multilayer. Die Scherfestigkeit von Panavia V5 zu Katana Zirconia ML war nicht durch thermische Belastung beeinflusst, jedoch bei Ceramill Zolid FX Multilayer. Der Haftverbund von Visalys CemCore war durch thermische Belastung beeinflusst, während Panavia V5 zu beiden Keramiken höhere Werte aufwies. Katana Zirconia ML hatte höhere Scherfestigkeitswerte als Ceramill Zolid FX Multilayer.
Schlussfolgerung: Multilayerkeramik stellt eine arbeitsverringernde Alternative für den Seitenzahnbereich dar, ohne mechanische und ästhetische Einbußen. Die Platzierung im Rohling hat keinen Einfluss auf die Eigenschaften, jedoch ist der Haftverbund vom Befestigungskomposit abhängig.
Objectives
To determine sleep bruxism (SB) behavior during five consecutive nights and to identify correlations between SB episodes per hour (SB index) and sleep-time masseter-muscle activity (sMMA).
Material and methods
Thirty-one participants were included in the study. Of these, 10 were classified as sleep bruxers (group SB-1) and nine as non-sleep bruxers (group non-SB). The bruxism status of these 19 patients was identified by means of questionnaires, an assessment of clinical symptoms, and electromyographic/electrocardiographic data (Bruxoff® device). The remaining 12 participants were also identified as bruxers, but based exclusively on data from the Bruxoff device (group SB-2). Data analysis included descriptive statistics and Spearman’s correlation to assess the relationship between the SB index and sMMA.
Results
Participants in group SB-1 showed an overall mean SB index of 3.1 ± 1.6 and a mean total sMMA per night of 62.9 ± 38.3. Participants in group SB-2 had an overall mean SB index of 2.7 ± 1.5 and a mean total sMMA of 56.0 ± 29.3. In the non-SB group, participants showed an overall mean SB index of 0.8 ± 0.5 and a mean total sMMA of 56.8 ± 30.3. Spearman’s correlation yielded values of − 0.27 to 0.71 for the correlation between sMMA and SB index.
Conclusions
The data revealed variable SB activity and the absence of a reliable correlation between sMMA and the SB index.
Clinical relevance
The high variation in SB activity and lack of correlation between sMMA and the SB index should be considered when diagnosing SB.
Trial registration
Clinical Trials [NIH], clinical trial no. NCT03039985.
To define frailty in older cancer patients, the aim of this study was to assess the geriatric status and quality of life (QoL) aspects in patients suffering from recurrent/metastatic head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (r/m HNSCC) under palliative treatment. A comprehensive geriatric assessment (CGA) was performed on 21 r/m HNSCC patients at two defined assessments, and the QoL aspects and the impact of descriptive data were evaluated. The Kolmogorov–Smirnov test, Spearman’s rho correlation, and two-way mixed ANOVA were used for statistical analysis. All patients were found to be “frail”. Pain, fatigue, and the burden of illness were the highest-rated symptoms. Oral function and orofacial appearance were highly impaired. A significant impact of descriptive data on the CGA and QoL results was found (all p ≤ 0.05). Thus, the CGA results revealed high frailty, severe comorbidities, and high impairments in QoL aspects. The CGA and QoL results were negatively affected by the primary HNSCC treatment approach, the need for prosthetic treatment, and worse oral functional capacity. Therefore, frailty in r/m HNSCC patients seems to be multidimensional. The evaluation of the CGA and QoL aspects in r/m HNSCC patients can be recommended to detect special needs, organize aftercare, and improve the support for frail and vulnerable cancer patients to create a multidisciplinary treatment approach.
Background: That a differentiated treatment of subjects with low and high levels of disabling pain might be necessarily has only been suspected but not sufficiently confirmed so far. Furthermore, the effectiveness of extraoral therapy methods for TMD is still controversial in the literature. The present work could make an important contribution to this.
Objectives: Five systematic reviews with meta-analysis were conducted to investigate the efficacy of extraoral therapies (acupuncture, laser, medication, psychosocial interventions, and physiotherapy) in the treatment of TMD in relation to the degree of chronicity of pain.
Literature sources: With this objective, the databases Pubmed/MEDLINE, EMBASE, Cochrane Library, Livivo, OpenGrey, drks.de, Clinicaltrials.gov. were searched.
Criteria for the selection of suitable studies: Adults suffering from painful TMD and treated with either acupuncture, laser, medication, psychosocial interventions, or physiotherapy. The studies were then examined for evidence in the subjects' characteristics suggesting that they were suffering from chronic TMD in terms of pain dysfunction. These included a high score on the GCPS, resistance to undergone treatments, multilocular pain, depression, and regular use of pain medication. The effectiveness of the five interventions was then differentiated according to the suspected degree of chronicity. Effectiveness was assessed by the following outcomes: patient- related current pain intensity, MMO, pain on palpation, temporomandibular joint sounds, depression, and somatization.
Study evaluation: After the assessment of the studies, the quality assessment (Risk of Bias Tool of the Cochrane Institute) and the extraction of the data were conducted. After that five meta-analyses were carried out for each of the five interventions using the Review Manager of the Cochrane Institute (RevMan 5.3)
Results: Acupuncture and dry needling were statistically significantly more effective in providing short-term pain relief compared to the control group in patients with low disability pain (p=0.04) and (p=0.02), respectively. Acupuncture or dry needling did not show a significant result in the improvement of MMO in the short-term period. Laser therapy is more effective in relieving pain (p<0.0001) and functional outcomes (p=0.03) in the short term compared to placebo for low disability pain. Botulinum toxin (p=0.003) and NSAIDs (p=0.03) showed significantly better short-term improvement in pain intensity for high disability pain. Low disability pain is significantly better treated by psychosocial interventions than by other treatments in terms of long-term pain relief (more than 12 months) (p=0.02). Patients with high disability pain had significantly lower depression scores after psychosocial interventions than after other treatments (p=0.008). Physiotherapy showed a statistically significant short-term analgesic effect in patients with high disability pain compared to placebo (p=0.04). Manual Therapy (MT) showed a statistically significant short-term analgesic effect in high disability pain compared to the control group (p=0.01). Patients with low disability pain showed a statistically significant short-term pain-relieving effect with the single intervention of MT in combination with exercise compared to the control groups (p=0.003). A statistically significant result in the improvement of MMO was found in the short-term period in low disability pain for the single interventions of physiotherapy (p=0.008) and physiotherapy in combination with another treatment compared to other treatments (p=0.03), MT compared to the control group (p=0.03) and physiotherapy compared to splint therapy (p=0.03). Clinical conclusion: Individual interventions of the five extraoral therapies confirm the hypothesis that painful TMDs respond differently to established therapies depending on the degree of chronic pain-related disability and that the prognosis of therapy is significantly influenced by the degree of chronic pain- related disability of the condition, according to the GCPS.
Registration number of the review at PROSPERO: CRD42020202558
Keywords: meta-analysis, systematic review, temporomandibular disorders, extra oral therapy, acupuncture, laser, medication, psychosocial interventions, physiotherapy, low disability, high disability, pain, chronification
Artificial intelligence (AI) has already arrived in many areas of our lives and, because of the increasing availability of computing power, can now be used for complex tasks in medicine and dentistry. This is reflected by an exponential increase in scientific publications aiming to integrate AI into everyday clinical routines. Applications of AI in orthodontics are already manifold and range from the identification of anatomical/pathological structures or reference points in imaging to the support of complex decision-making in orthodontic treatment planning. The aim of this article is to give the reader an overview of the current state of the art regarding applications of AI in orthodontics and to provide a perspective for the use of such AI solutions in clinical routine. For this purpose, we present various use cases for AI in orthodontics, for which research is already available. Considering the current scientific progress, it is not unreasonable to assume that AI will become an integral part of orthodontic diagnostics and treatment planning in the near future. Although AI will equally likely not be able to replace the knowledge and experience of human experts in the not-too-distant future, it probably will be able to support practitioners, thus serving as a quality-assuring component in orthodontic patient care.
71 Studierende nahmen am Universitätsklinikum Würzburg in der Abteilung für Zahnärztliche Prothetik an einem freiwilligen Übungsseminar zum Aufpassen von Kronen mit Störstellen, die im 3D-Druckverfahren hergestellt wurden, teil. Das Übungsseminar fand an zwei Terminen statt. Zum Identifizieren der Störstellen standen Xantopren und Okklusionsspray zur Verfügung. Nach dem praktischen Teil der Übung wurde ein Fragebogen ausgefüllt. Zusätzlich wurden die aufgepassten Kronen mittels Laborscanner digitalisiert und mit einer Krone ohne Störstellen überlagert. Dadurch konnten positive und negative Oberflächenabweichungen für die Bereiche der Störstellen sowie der Gesamtinnenfläche der Kronen ermittelt werden.
Die flächenbezogenen Abweichungswerte zeigten einen signifikanten Lernerfolg – gemessen anhand der Passungsparameter - zwischen den beiden Terminen des Übungsseminars. Hierbei erreichten Kronen, die mit Okklusionsspray aufgepasst wurden, signifikant geringere flächenbezogene Abweichungswerte im Vergleich zu Kronen, die mit Xantopren aufgepasst wurden.
Die Auswertung der mit Schulnoten skalierten Fragen ergab signifikante Unterschiede bei der Bewertung der Härte, eines realitätsnahen Gefühls beim Einschleifen bzw. beim Aufpassen und Details wie Randschluss. Beim Vergleich der Aufpassmethoden im Fragebogen ergaben die Einfachheit beim Aufpassen, das Identifizieren der Störstellen und das präferierte Material signifikante Unterschiede. Der subjektive Lernerfolg mit den Materialien zeigte ebenfalls signifikante Unterschiede. Insbesondere die Materialeigenschaften und die Randgenauigkeit der Druckkronen wurden häufig kritisiert, die schnelle und einfache Möglichkeit zur Herstellung von Übungsmaterialien sowie deren Reproduzierbarkeit wurden von den Studierenden hingegen begrüßt.
Ziel dieser klinisch-experimentellen Studie war die Untersuchung
elektromyographischer Kaumuskelprofile von beschwerdefreien Probandinnen
unterschiedlichen Bruxismusgrades nach sensomotorischem Training. Die aufgestellte
Hypothese postulierte signifikante Unterschiede der EMG-Parameter nach
sensomotorischem Training. Nach einer Ruhephase ohne Intervention sollten die
Unterschiede in den Ausgangszustand zurückkehren. Hierzu wurden 40 Probandinnen
mit einem Durchschnittsalter von 24,58 ± 2,72 Jahren über einen Zeitraum von fünf
Wochen untersucht. Die Probandinnen wurden mittels zufälliger Verteilung und
altersentsprechend gematcht in zwei gleichgroße Gruppen eingeteilt. Sowohl die
Teilnehmerinnen der Kontrollgruppe, als auch die der Interventionsgruppe absolvierten
im Verlauf der Studie drei elektromyographische Messungen. Nach einer einwöchigen
Voruntersuchungsphase fand die erste Messung (T1) statt. Nach drei Wochen und nach
fünf Wochen erfolgten die zweite (T2) und die dritte Messung (T3). Während der
Messungen führten die Probandinnen kraftkontrollierte Übungen mit drei
submaximalen Kraftleveln und maximalen Kräften aus. Zusätzlich absolvierte die
Interventionsgruppe zwischen T1 und T2 ein sensomotorisches Training mit dem
RehaBite®-Gerät. Die bipolaren Oberflächen-EMG-Ableitungen erfolgten für beide Mm.
masseteres und Mm. temporales. Insgesamt wurden acht Muskelareale aufgezeichnet.
Sechs für die Mm. masseteres und zwei für die Mm. temporales. Die submaximalen
Kräfte wurden als RMS %MVC und die maximalen Kräfte als RMS MVC verglichen. Die
statistischen Vergleiche erfolgten anhand von T-Tests und Mixed ANOVAs. Nach
Beurteilung der Ergebnisse konnte kein signifikanter Effekt des sensomotorischen
Trainings identifiziert werden. Die aufgestellte Hypothese muss daher abgelehnt
werden. Für das erste der drei submaximalen Kraftlevel konnte für die Initialmessung
(T1) ein signifikanter Unterschied zwischen Probandinnen mit und ohne Schlafbruxismus
in zwei der acht Muskelareale festgestellt werden. Für zukünftige Folgeuntersuchungen
zur Wirksamkeit des sensomotorischen Trainings bei Bruxismus ist die Verlängerung des
Interventionsintervalls sowie eine Vergrößerung des Studienkollektivs samt Einschluss
männlicher Probanden empfehlenswert.
The main objective of this study was to test whether subjects with different degrees of bruxism differ regarding EMG parameters and whether CES intervention affects those parameters. The hypothesis was that CES influences EMG parameters and after its’ cessation, all EMG parameters return to baseline (exposure–response relationship).
For this purpose, forty subjects were examined, 16 men and 24 women, matched for age and gender and assigned randomly in the intervention (N=20) and control group (N=20). The procedure was as follows: 1-week inactive GC (N=40), 2 weeks inactive/active GC (N=20/N=20), 2 weeks inactive GC (N=40). Each interval was followed by a surface EMG recording from eight muscle parts (right and left anterior -, medial -, and posterior masseter and right and left anterior temporalis) under force-controlled feedback (BiteFork®) with three submaximal bite forces. The resulting EMG activity is expressed as RMS % MVC and RMS at MVC. The statistics is performed with t-test, one-way rmANOVA, and Friedman rmANOVA on ranks, according to the distribution of the data. The significance level was set at p≤0.05.
The results generated from the within-groups and between-groups comparison were mostly not statistically significant and could therefore not offer clinically relevant conclu-sions.
However, it cannot be excluded that a higher submaximal bite force and an extended intervention interval would have rendered different outcomes. The insufficient study sample resulted in a low observed power which makes the findings prone to Type II er-ror. It can be concluded that this study did not find any substantiating differences be-tween the EMG values of participants with various bruxism activity and that CES could not influence the studied EMG parameters in the two weeks intervention time.
Our hypothesis which supposes that subjects with high and low bruxism activity differ in RMS % MVC could not be verified. However, with the gained knowledge, it is recom-mended to further elaborate a definite bruxism diagnosis by using portable EMG devices.