Comparison of conventional, photogrammetry, and intraoral scanning accuracy of complete-arch implant impression procedures evaluated with a coordinate measuring machine
The Journal of Prosthetic Dentistry
Available online 6 May 2020
Abstract
Statement of problem
Conventional
implant impressions by using elastomeric impression material have been
reported as a more reliable technique for a complete-arch implant record
compared with intraoral scanner procedures. Photogrammetry technology
may provide a reliable alternative to digital scanning or a conventional
impression; however, its accuracy remains unclear.
Purpose
The
purpose of this in vitro study was to measure and compare the implant
abutment replica positions of the definitive cast with the implant
abutment replica positions obtained by the conventional technique,
photogrammetry, and 2 intraoral scanners.
Material and methods
An
edentulous maxillary cast with 6 implant abutment replicas (RC analog
for screw-retained abutment straight) was prepared. Three impression
techniques were performed: the conventional impression technique (CNV
group) by using a custom tray elastomeric impression procedure after
splinting the impression copings at room temperature (23°C),
photogrammetry (PG group) technology (Icam4D), digital scans by using 2
different IOSs following the manufacturer′s recommended scanning
protocol, namely IOS-1 (iTero Element) and IOS-2 (TRIOS 3) groups
(n=10). A coordinate measuring machine (CMM Contura G2 10/16/06 RDS) was
used to measure the implant abutment replica positions of the
definitive casts and to compare the linear discrepancies at the x-, y-,
and z-axes and the angular distortion of each implant abutment replica
position by using a computer aided-design software program (Geomagic)
and the best fit technique. The 3D linear gap discrepancy was
calculated. Measurements were repeated 3 times. The Shapiro-Wilk test
revealed that the data were not normally distributed; therefore, the
Kruskal-Wallis test was used to analyze the data, followed by pairwise
Mann-Whitney U tests (α=.05).
Results
Significant y-axis linear and XY and YZ angular discrepancies were found among the CNV, PG, IOS-1, and IOS-2 groups (P<.05).
The PG group obtained a significantly higher distortion on the y-axis
and 3D gap compared with all the remaining groups (P=.004). The
3D discrepancy of the CNV group was 11.7 μm, of the IOS-1 group was
18.4 μm, of the IOS-2 was 21.1 μm, and of the PG group was 77.6 μm. In
all groups, the interquartile range was higher than the median errors
from the discrepancies measured from the definitive cast, indicating
that the relative precision was low.
Conclusions
The
conventional technique reported the lowest 3D discrepancy for the
implant abutment position translation capabilities of all the implant
techniques evaluated. The intraoral scanners tested provided no
significant differences in linear distortion compared with the
conventional method. However, the photogrammetry system tested provided
the least accurate values, with the highest 3D discrepancy for the
implant abutment positions among all the groups.
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