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  2. Rochette bridge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rochette_bridge

    A Rochette bridge is a type of dental prosthesis popular in the 1970s, [citation needed] and described by Alain Rochette in 1973 [1] as a form of resin retained bridge that relied on countersunk holes perforating the metal abutment wing. These would be filled with composite cement on seating the restoration, providing macromechanical retention ...

  3. Resin-retained bridge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resin-retained_bridge

    It is one of many available dental restoration methods which is considered minimally invasive and conservative of tooth tissue. [1] The resin-retained-bridge has gone through a number of iterations. Perhaps the best known is the Maryland bridge and other designs used in the past include the Rochette bridge.

  4. Bridge (dentistry) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bridge_(dentistry)

    The taper of each preparation on the abutment teeth must be the same. This is known as parallelism among the abutments and allows the bridge to fit onto the abutment teeth. Adhesive bridges require minimal preparation. Master impressions: An accurate impression should be made of the prepared teeth, along with an impression of the opposing arch ...

  5. Dental prosthesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dental_prosthesis

    A dental prosthesis is an intraoral (inside the mouth) prosthesis used to restore (reconstruct) intraoral defects such as missing teeth, missing parts of teeth, and missing soft or hard structures of the jaw and palate. [1] Prosthodontics is the dental specialty that focuses on dental prostheses.

  6. Removable partial denture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Removable_partial_denture

    A removable partial denture (RPD) is a denture for a partially edentulous patient who desires to have replacement teeth for functional or aesthetic reasons and who cannot have a bridge (a fixed partial denture) for any reason, such as a lack of required teeth to serve as support for a bridge (i.e. distal abutments) or financial limitations.

  7. Complete dentures - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Complete_dentures

    There has been a decline in both the prevalence and incidence of tooth loss within the last decades; [1] [2] people retain their natural dentition for longer. Nonetheless there is still a great demand for complete dentures as more than 10% of adults aged 50–64 are completely edentulous, with age, smoking status and socioeconomic status being significant risk factors. [2]