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Support for Distal Extension Bases

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Support for Distal Extension Bases in Removable Partial Dentures – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Support for Distal Extension Bases


1
Support for the Distal Extension Denture Base
  • Dr. Shujah A Khan
  • MDS Resident Prosthodontics
  • DIKHOS, DUHS

2
Distal Extension Removable Partial Denture
  • The distal extension removable partial denture
    does not have the advantage of total tooth
    support because one or more bases are
    extensions covering the residual ridge distal to
    the last abutment.
  • It therefore is dependent on the residual ridge
    for a portion of its support

3
  • The distal extension removable partial
    denture must depend on the residual ridge
    for some support, stability, and retention.
  • Indirect retention, to prevent the denture
    from lifting away from the residual ridge,
    should also be incorporated in the design.

4
Factors Influencing Support of a Distal Extension
Base
  • Support from the residual ridge becomes
    more important as the distance from the last
    abutment increases and will depend on the
    following several factors
  • Contour and quality of the residual ridge
  • Extent of residual ridge coverage by the denture
    base
  • Type and accuracy of the impression registration
  • Accuracy of the fit of the denture base
  • Design of the removable partial denture framework
  • Total occlusal load applied

5
Contour and Quality of The Residual Ridge
  • The ideal residual ridge to support a
    denture base would consist of cortical bone
    that covers relatively dense cancellous bone,
    with a broad rounded crest with high
    vertical slopes, and is covered by firm,
    dense, fibrous connective tissue.
  • Such a residual ridge would optimally support
    vertical and horizontal stresses placed on it by
    denture bases.

6
  • Easily displaceable tissue will not
    adequately support a denture base, and
    tissues that are interposed between a sharp,
    bony residual ridge and a denture base will not
    remain in a healthy state.
  • Crest of the bony mandibular residual ridge is
    most often cancellous therefore cannot be a
    primary stress bearing region.

7
  • Buccal shelf area seems to be better suited for
    the primary stress bearing area.
  • Slopes of residual ridge ? primary stress bearing
    region for resistance of horizontal and
    off-vertical forces

8
The dotted portion outlines the crest of the
residual ridge, which should be recorded in its
anatomic form in impression procedures.
Buccal shelf regions are outlined by a
herringbone pattern, and selected additional
pressures may be placed on these regions for
vertical support of the denture base
Lingual slopes of the residual ridge(cross-hatched
) these regions principally resist the
horizontal rotational tendencies of the
denture base and should be recorded by the
impression in undisplaced form.
9
  • Immediate crest of the bone of the maxillary
    residual ridge may consist primarily of
    cancellous bone
  • The crestal area of the residual ridge will
    become the primary stress bearing area to
    vertically directed forces
  • Some resistance maybe obtained by the immediate
    buccal and lingual slopes of the ridge

10
  • Palatal tissues between the medial palatal raphe
    and the lingual slope of the posterior edentulous
    ridge are readily displaced and cannot be
    considered as primary stress bearing areas

11
The crest of the maxillary residual ridge
(herringbone pattern) is the primary supporting
region for the maxillary distal extension denture
base
The dotted portion outlines the incisive papilla
and the median palatal raphe. Relief must be
provided for these regions, especially if tissues
covering the palatal raphe are less displaceable
than those covering the crest of the residual
ridge
Buccal and lingual slopes may furnish limited
vertical support to the denture base. Their
primary role is to counteract the horizontal
rotational tendencies of the denture base.
12
Extent of Residual Ridge Coverage by Denture Base
  • The broader the residual ridge coverage the
    greater is the distribution of the load ?
    Snowshoe principle?
  • Kaires maximum coverage of the denture-bearing
    areas with large, wide denture bases is of utmost
    importance in withstanding both vertical and
    horizontal stresses

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14
Types and Accuracy of Impression Registration
  • Residual ridge
  • Anatomic Form
  • Surface contour when it not supporting an
    occlusal load
  • Functional Form
  • When the ridge is supporting a functional load

15
Accuracy of the Fit of the Denture Base
  • Support of the distal extension base is enhanced
    by intimacy of contact of the tissue surface of
    the base and the tissues that cover the residual
    ridge.
  • The tissue surface must optimally represent a
    true negative of the basal seat regions.

16
Design of the Removable Partial Denture Framework
  • Some rotation movement of a distal extension base
    at the distal abutment is inevitable under
    functional loading.
  • The greatest movement takes place at the most
    posterior extent of the denture base.
  • Retromolar pad of the mandibular residual ridge
  • Tuberosity region of the maxillary residual ridge

17
  • Steffel and Kratochvil have suggested that as
    the rotational axis is moved from a
    disto-occlusal rest to a more anterior
    location, more of the residual ridge
    receives vertically directed occlusal forces
    to support the denture base.

18
  • Occlusal rests may be moved anteriorly to better
    use the residual ridge for support without
    jeopardizing either vertical or horizontal
    support of the denture by occlusal rests
    and guiding planes

19
Total Occlusal Load Applied
  • Patients with distal extension removable
    partial dentures generally orient the food bolus
    over natural teeth rather than prosthetic teeth.
  • More stable nature of the natural dentition, the
    proprioceptive feedback it provides for
    chewing, and the possible nocioceptive
    feedback from the supporting mucosa.
  • This has an effect on the direction and
    magnitude of the occlusal load to the
    removable partial denture, and thus on the load
    transferred to the abutments.
  • The number of artificial teeth, the width of
    their occlusal surfaces, and their occlusal
    efficiency influence the total occlusal load
    applied to the removable partial denture.

20
Anatomic Form Impression
  • One stage impression using an elastic impression
    material that does not represent the functional
    relationship between various supporting
    structures of the partially edentulous mouth
  • Only represent hard and soft tissues at rest.

21
  • A partial denture fabricated from a one stage
    impression, places more of the masticatory load
    on the abutment teeth and that part of the bone
    that underlies the distal end of the extension
    base.
  • Effects
  • Traumatic load to the underlying bone
  • Bone loss and loosening of abutment tooth

22
Selective Tissue Placement Impression Method
  • The goal is to maximize soft tissue support while
    using the teeth to their supportive advantage,
    the framework fitted to the teeth while soft
    tissue support is registered provides a means of
    coordinating both.
  • A secondary impression for the distal extension
    mandibular removable partial denture is made in
    individual trays attached to the denture framework

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26
Altered Cast Method
  • The altered cast method of impression
    making is most commonly used for the mandibular
    distal extension partially edentulous arch
    (Kennedy Class I and Class II arch forms).
  • A common clinical finding in these
    situations is greater variation in tissue
    mobility and tissue distortion or
    displaceability, which requires some
    selective tissue placement to obtain the
    desired support from these tissues.

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