A novel dual material mouthguard for patients with dental implants.
Journal article, 2013

AIM: Dental implant-supported reconstructions demonstrate significantly less physiological flexibility for loading and traumatic forces compared with a normal dentition because of their rigid integration with the adjacent bone. Ethylene vinyl acetate (EVA) material has become widely accepted as a mouthguard material; however, many studies indicate the necessity of improving the impact absorption ability by considering the design and developing new materials. The aim of this study was to compare the shock-absorbing ability of a novel dual component material comprising EVA and porous rubber with that of EVA alone. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Three groups of samples were tested: Group 1 = EVA (thickness, 4 mm), Group 2 = type 1 material (2-mm thick porous rubber sheet sandwiched between two sheets of 1-mm thick EVA sheets), and Group 3 = type 2 material (1-mm thick porous rubber sheet sandwiched between EVA sheets with 1 and 2-mm thickness, respectively). Shock absorption was determined by means of a hammer impact testing device equipped with strain gauge, accelerator, and load cell. RESULTS: The value of shock-absorbing ability of group 2 (40.6 ± 12.5%) was significantly higher than those of group 1 (15.6 ± 2.1%) and group 3 (21.2 ± 9.2%). The material with thicker rubber sheet showed significantly higher shock-absorbing ability compared with that of the material with thinner rubber sheet. CONCLUSIONS: The novel dual material was superior to conventional EVA material in shock-absorbing ability depending on the thickness of porous rubber, and it may be potentially effective as mouthguard material, in particular, for patients wearing implant-supported constructions.

Author

Takayuki Miyahara

University of Gothenburg

Christer Dahlin

University of Gothenburg

Silvia Galli

University of Gothenburg

Shima Parsafar

Chalmers, Chemical and Biological Engineering, Life Sciences

University of Gothenburg

Hiroyasu Koizumi

Nihon University

Shohei Kasugai

Tokyo Medical and Dental University

Dental Traumatology

1600-4469 (ISSN) 1600-9657 (eISSN)

Vol. 29 4 303-306

Subject Categories

Dentistry

DOI

10.1111/j.1600-9657.2012.01171.x

PubMed

22853626

More information

Created

10/8/2017