Abstract

This randomized controlled trial (RCT) aimed to elucidate the effectiveness of silicone-based resilient denture liners on perceived chewing ability. The RCT included completely edentulous patients on both the maxilla and mandible, who were willing to fabricate a new set of complete dentures. A random permuted block method (block size: 4) was used to assign groups to receive maxilla conventional complete denture and mandibular with either a conventional complete denture (CD) or complete demure relined with silicone-based resilient denture liner (RD). The patient-reported chewing ability of six foods, soybean curd, fish sausage, soybean sprout, cubic rice cracker, hard rice cracker, and dry squid, on a 100-mm visual analog scale was measured and reported at the final adjustment and three months after the final adjustment. Mann-Whitney U test was used to analyze the differences between the CD and RD (p < 0.05). Edentulous patients wearing mandibular complete denture with RD had a higher patient-reported chewing ability than those wearing a CD, but the fish sausage did not in the RD three months after the final adjustment. It also took three months for the patient-reported masticatory ability to improve for cubic rice crackers, hard rice crackers, and dry squid and to show a difference between the RD and CD groups. Although limited to some food types, mandibular complete dentures relined with silicone-based liners improved patient-reported chewing ability.

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