Finite‐Element Analysis Study Comparing Titanium and Polyetheretherketone Caps in a Conometric Connection between Implant and Prosthesis

Author:

Ceddia Mario1,Romasco Tea23,Comuzzi Luca4,Specchiulli Alessandro2,Piattelli Adriano56,Lamberti Luciano1,Di Pietro Natalia23ORCID,Trentadue Bartolomeo1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Mechanics, Mathematics and Management Polytechnic University of Bari 70125 Bari Italy

2. Department of Medical Oral and Biotechnological Sciences “G. D’Annunzio” University of Chieti‐Pescara 66100 Chieti Italy

3. Center for Advanced Studies and Technology (CAST) “G. D’Annunzio” University of Chieti‐Pescara 66100 Chieti Italy

4. Private Practice 31020 San Vendemiano Italy

5. School of Dentistry Saint Camillus International University of Health and Medical Sciences 00131 Rome Italy

6. Facultad de Medicina UCAM Universidad Católica San Antonio de Murcia 30107 Murcia Spain

Abstract

Prosthetic retention relies on the perfect adaptation between the cap and the abutment of a dental implant. The conometric connection ensures retention similar to cemented systems, preventing bacterial infiltration and sustaining a high implant success rate. Furthermore, the material used for the cap plays a crucial role in distributing stress on the implant components and bone. Traditionally, caps use titanium (Ti), but ongoing research investigates polyetheretherketone (PEEK) for its bone‐like qualities and similar elasticity to Ti. In this finite‐element analysis study, stress and strain distributions are compared between crestal and subcrestal implants using Ti and PEEK conometric caps, assessing retention through cap displacement to determine the material best suited for proper retention aligned with implant insertion depth. In the findings, an improvement in stress and strain is indicated on trabecular bone, a reduction in stress on cortical bone, and thus enhanced implant stability due to higher stresses around the implant threads, particularly with PEEK coping and subcrestal placement. Consequently, PEEK emerges as a promising substitute for Ti in conometric caps as it absorbs stress more effectively, distributing it across prosthetics to counter stress shielding and prevent implant failure.

Publisher

Wiley

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