CDOCS a SPEAR Company

Single Wing Maryland Bridge with IPS e.max

Thomas Monahan Daniel Wilson
7 years ago

CEREC gives us a ton of options and allows us to do treatment for patients without the frustration to us as clinicians or frustration to our patients.  For me one of those treatments is Maryland Bridges.  As we all know, if we attempt to do this with a lab, provisionalization is challenging and we are at the mercy of the lab for getting the shade and fit correct.  CADCAM has made this a very efficient and predictable option for us chairside.

 This patient has a lot of compromises but really wanted something fixed versus her removable partial to replace #23.  As you can see from the radiograph, tooth #24 is not doing well.  I had her get a consultation from an endodontist and took a CBCT.   He thinks it looks fine and would be a candidate for an abutment but I still think the tooth is toast.  I really wanted to avoid potentially opening a bag of worms with #24 and didn't want to prep #22 for full coverage to act as an abutment for a conventional 3 unit FPD.

So after some discussion, I felt a Maryland bridge was the best option.  In this case, I did prep a little into the canine a little bit.  

Here's the proposal: 

Restoration at try-in: 

I used a C14 block A2 LT.  I did have to re-fire this case a second time for color. 

Nothing earth shattering for this case, but I'm still amazed how we can do this in less than a two hour appointment and be ultra conservative and get a great result.  I don't know how long this will last (I've been searching on PubMed for articles that Skramy refers to but couldn't find them), but with total etch and enamel bond, I think it will do well for quite some time.

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