Dictionary Definition
bridgework n : a denture anchored to teeth on
either side of missing teeth [syn: bridge]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Extensive Definition
A dental bridge, otherwise known
as a fixed partial denture, is a prosthesis used to replace
missing teeth and is not
removable by the patient. A prosthesis that is removable by the
patient is called a removable
partial denture.
A dental bridge is fabricated by reducing the
teeth on either side of the missing tooth or teeth by a preparation
pattern determined by the location of the teeth and by the material
from which the bridge is fabricated. In other words the abutment
teeth are reduced in size to accommodate the material to be used to
restore the size and shape of the original teeth in a correct
alignment and contact with the opposing teeth. The dimensions of
the bridge are defined by Ante's Law: "The root surface area
of the abutment teeth
has to equal or surpass that of the teeth being replaced with
pontics" .
The materials used for the bridge include
gold, porcelain fused to metal, or
in the correct situation porcelain alone. The amount and type of
reduction done to the abutment teeth varies slightly with the
different materials used. The recipient of such a bridge must be
careful to clean well under this prosthesis.
When restoring an edentulous space with a fixed
partial denture that will crown the teeth adjacent to the space and
bridge the gap with a pontic, or "dummy tooth", the restoration is
referred to as a bridge. Besides all of the preceding information
that concerns single-unit crowns, bridges possess a few additional
considerations when it comes to case selection and treatment
planning, tooth preparation and restoration fabrication.
Case selection and treatment planning
When a single tooth requires a crown, the prosthetic crown will in most instances rest upon whatever tooth structure was originally supporting the crown of the natural tooth. However, when restoring an edentulous area with a bridge, the bridge is almost always restoring more teeth than there are root structures to support. For instance, in the photo at right, the 5-unit bridge will only be supported on three abutment teeth. In order to determine whether or not the abutment teeth will be able to support a bridge without a virtually guaranteed failure due to lack of proper support from the remaining root structures, the dentist should employ Ante's rule, which states that the roots of the remaining abutment teeth must possess a combined total surface area in three dimensions more than that of the missing root structures that are to be restored with the bridge. When the situation yields a poor prognosis for proper support, double abutments may be required to properly conform to Ante's rule.When a posterior tooth that is intended to become
an abutment tooth already possesses an intracoronal restoration, it
might be in order to make that bridge abutment into an inlay
or an onlay,
instead of a crown. However, this may concentrate the torque of the masticatory forces onto a
less enveloping restoration, thus making the bridge more prone to
failure.
In some situations, a cantilever bridge may be
constructed to restore an edentulous area that only has
adequate teeth for abutments either
mesially or
distally. This must also conform to Ante's rule but, because
there are only abutments on one side, a modification to the rule
must be applied, and these bridges possess double abutments in the
majority of cases, and the
occlusal surface area of the pontic is generally decreased by
making the pontic smaller than the original tooth.
Tooth preparation
As with preparations for single-unit crowns, the preparations for multiple-unit bridges must also possess proper taper to facilitate the insertion of the prosthesis onto the teeth. However, there is an added dimension when it comes to bridges, because the bridge must be able to fit onto the abutment teeth simultaneously. Thus, the taper of the abutment teeth must match in order to properly seat the bridge; this is known as requiring parallelism among the abutments. When this is not possible, due to severe tipping of one of more of the abutments, for example, an attachment may be useful, as in the photo at right, so that one of the abutments may be cemented first, and the other abutment, attached to the pontic, can then be inserted, with an arm on the pontic slipping into a groove on the cemented crown to achieve a span across the edentulous area.Restoration fabrication
As with single-unit crowns, bridges may be fabricated using the lost-wax technique if the restoration is to be either a multiple-unit FGC or PFM. As mentioned in the paragraph above, there are special considerations when preparing for a multiple-unit restoration in that the relationship between the two or more abutments must be maintained in the restoration; that is, there must be proper parallelism in order for the bridge to be able to seat properly on the margins. Sometimes, the bridge does not seat, but the dentist is unsure whether or not it is only because the spacial relationship of the two or more abutments is incorrect, or whether the abutments do not actually fit the preparations. The only way to determine this would be to section the bridge and try in each abutment by itself. If they all fit individually, it must have simply been that the spacial relationship was incorrect, and the abutment that was sectioned from the pontic must now be reattached to the pontic according to the newly confirmed spacial relationship. This is accomplished with a solder index.The
proximal surfaces of the sectioned units (that is, the adjacent
surfaces of the metal at the cut) are roughened and the
relationship is preserved with a material that will hold onto both
sides, such as GC pattern resin. With the two bridge abutments
individually seated on their prepared abutment teeth, the resin is
applied to the location of the sectioning to reestablish a proper
spacial relationship between the two pieces. This can then be sent
to the lab where the two pieces will be soldered and returned for
another try-in or final cementation.
References
bridgework in Czech: Zubní můstek
bridgework in German: Brücke (Zahntechnik)
bridgework in Esperanto: Pontaĵo
bridgework in Dutch: Brug (tandheelkunde)
bridgework in Japanese: ブリッジ
(歯科)