Abstract
Purpose Wear of commercially pure (CP) titanium prosthetic teeth has frequently been observed. The greatest wear has been found when the same grades of CP titanium are used for both maxillary and mandibular teeth. This study examined the wear behavior of teeth made with cast titanium alloy and compared these results with those for CP titanium and gold alloy teeth.Materials and Methods All tooth specimens were cast with grade 3 α titanium, 3 metastable β alloys [Ti‐15Mo‐2.8Nb‐0.2Si (Timetal 21 SRx), Ti‐13Nb‐13Zr, and Ti‐15V‐3Cr‐3Sn‐3Al], and 2 α+β alloys (Ti‐6Al‐7Nb and Ti‐6Al‐4V). As a control, Type IV gold alloy was also cast conventionally. All teeth (both maxillary and mandibular) were secured in an in vitro 2‐body wear testing apparatus that simulated chewing function (60 strokes/min; grinding distance, 2 mm under flowing water). Wear resistance was assessed as volume loss (mm3) at 5 kgf (grinding force) after 50,000 strokes. The results (n= 5) were analyzed using analysis of variance or Fisher's exact test (α= 0.05).Results Of the titanium teeth, the wear of 2 of the metastable β alloys (Timetal 21 SRx and Ti‐15V‐3Cr‐3Sn‐3Al) was found to be significantly (p <0.05) higher than that of CP titanium and the 2 α+β alloys. The Type IV gold alloy exhibited better wear resistance than all of the titanium teeth tested. No correlation was found between wear loss and hardness among all the metals tested.Conclusions Among the titanium teeth examined, the α+β alloys exhibited significantly less wear than the other types of titanium. The dental casting gold alloy tested exhibited the best wear resistance among all of the metals tested.
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