The Failure Envelope Concept Applied To The Bone-Dental Implant System

Abstract Dental implants interact with the jawbone through their common interface. While the implant is an inert structure, the jawbone is a living one that reacts to mechanical stimuli. Setting aside mechanical failure considerations of the implant, the bone is the main component to be addressed. W...

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Main Authors: R. Korabi, K. Shemtov-Yona, A. Dorogoy, D. Rittel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2017-05-01
Series:Scientific Reports
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-02282-2
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spelling doaj-1e671d265bdc454589e342587f91ca952020-12-08T00:16:35ZengNature Publishing GroupScientific Reports2045-23222017-05-017111110.1038/s41598-017-02282-2The Failure Envelope Concept Applied To The Bone-Dental Implant SystemR. Korabi0K. Shemtov-Yona1A. Dorogoy2D. Rittel3Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, TechnionFaculty of Mechanical Engineering, TechnionFaculty of Mechanical Engineering, TechnionFaculty of Mechanical Engineering, TechnionAbstract Dental implants interact with the jawbone through their common interface. While the implant is an inert structure, the jawbone is a living one that reacts to mechanical stimuli. Setting aside mechanical failure considerations of the implant, the bone is the main component to be addressed. With most failure criteria being expressed in terms of stress or strain values, their fulfillment can mean structural flow or fracture. However, in addition to those effects, the bony structure is likely to react biologically to the applied loads by dissolution or remodeling, so that additional (strain-based) criteria must be taken into account. While the literature abounds in studies of particular loading configurations, e.g. angle and value of the applied load to the implant, a general study of the admissible implant loads is still missing. This paper introduces the concept of failure envelopes for the dental implant-jawbone system, thereby defining admissible combinations of vertical and lateral loads for various failure criteria of the jawbone. Those envelopes are compared in terms of conservatism, thereby providing a systematic comparison of the various failure criteria and their determination of the admissible loads.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-02282-2
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author R. Korabi
K. Shemtov-Yona
A. Dorogoy
D. Rittel
spellingShingle R. Korabi
K. Shemtov-Yona
A. Dorogoy
D. Rittel
The Failure Envelope Concept Applied To The Bone-Dental Implant System
Scientific Reports
author_facet R. Korabi
K. Shemtov-Yona
A. Dorogoy
D. Rittel
author_sort R. Korabi
title The Failure Envelope Concept Applied To The Bone-Dental Implant System
title_short The Failure Envelope Concept Applied To The Bone-Dental Implant System
title_full The Failure Envelope Concept Applied To The Bone-Dental Implant System
title_fullStr The Failure Envelope Concept Applied To The Bone-Dental Implant System
title_full_unstemmed The Failure Envelope Concept Applied To The Bone-Dental Implant System
title_sort failure envelope concept applied to the bone-dental implant system
publisher Nature Publishing Group
series Scientific Reports
issn 2045-2322
publishDate 2017-05-01
description Abstract Dental implants interact with the jawbone through their common interface. While the implant is an inert structure, the jawbone is a living one that reacts to mechanical stimuli. Setting aside mechanical failure considerations of the implant, the bone is the main component to be addressed. With most failure criteria being expressed in terms of stress or strain values, their fulfillment can mean structural flow or fracture. However, in addition to those effects, the bony structure is likely to react biologically to the applied loads by dissolution or remodeling, so that additional (strain-based) criteria must be taken into account. While the literature abounds in studies of particular loading configurations, e.g. angle and value of the applied load to the implant, a general study of the admissible implant loads is still missing. This paper introduces the concept of failure envelopes for the dental implant-jawbone system, thereby defining admissible combinations of vertical and lateral loads for various failure criteria of the jawbone. Those envelopes are compared in terms of conservatism, thereby providing a systematic comparison of the various failure criteria and their determination of the admissible loads.
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-02282-2
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