Abstract

The purpose of this study was to compare prosthetic, functional and occlusal conditions in twenty-seven patients treated with distally extending cantilever bridges and twenty-six patients treated with removable partial dentures (RPD) in the mandible. All patients had a complete upper denture. Mean age of the patients in both groups was about 69 years. The patients were under a supervised oral hygiene care throughout the 2-year study period. There were 6.9 +/- 1.7 mandibular teeth left in the bridge group and 7.5 +/- 1.7 in the RPD group and the mean number of posterior teeth (natural teeth/denture teeth/pontics) in occlusion was 4.1 +/- 1.1 and 7.3 +/- 1.4, respectively. During the study period signs and symptoms of mandibular dysfunction became significantly aggravated in the RPD group, P less than 0.05. A balanced occlusion in the muscular contact position was observed in 90% of the patients in the bridge group and in 76% of the RPD wearers. During the study period the need for dental or prosthetic treatment was negligible in the patients treated with bridges. In the RPD group, twenty-two teeth were restored with fillings due to caries and in eight patients major adjustments of the sublingual bar were necessary due to irritation of the oral mucosa. This study has shown that treatment with distally extending cantilever bridges in the mandible is a favourable alternative to treatment with removable partial dentures in elderly patients with a reduced dentition.

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