Feature
Jun 2009 —
Vol. 5,
Iss. 6
Prep vs No-Prep: The Evolution of Veneers
Allison M. DiMatteo, BA, MPS
Patients and dentists alike are increasingly the target of marketing messages about no-preparation, thin, and/or minimal preparation veneers. some of the information that may be conveyed is nothing more than over-generalized hype designed to get reluctant patients into the dental office, or to motivate dentists to use a new restorative product for their cosmetic case. One thing’s for sure: the no-prep, thin, and/or minimal preparation veneer’s time has come, and that’s perhaps what’s fueling all the fuss. After all, the age of conservative treatments and minimal intervention has dawned.
Interestingly, however, the concept or philosophy of a
no-prep or minimal preparation veneer isn’t new. In fact, it’s
more than 25 years old.
“We have come full circle. Veneers started out
as primarily an additive technique and, as such, we know a great deal about
their application and longevity,” recalls Betsy Bakeman, DDS,
accredited fellow of the American Academy of Cosmetic Dentistry.
“Enamel substrates, when properly prepared, offer the most
predictable surface in which to bond porcelain. Of course, not every
situation that is suitable for no-prep veneers is entirely in enamel. The
patient may have attrition of the occlusal surfaces into dentin or cervical
erosion that exposes dentin. Therefore, the question about longevity should
not be as much about how much the tooth is prepared but how much enamel
remains.”
So what exactly is involved with no-prep, thin, or
minimal preparation veneers? According to Ed McLaren, DDS, director of the
UCLA Center for Esthetic Dentistry, “the marketing would have you
believe a specific product, but there are several products that can be used
with this technique. It is really a technique.”
While there is no consensus in terms of what defines a
no-preparation veneer or a minimal preparation veneer, long-time evaluators
of the porcelain laminate veneer modality—such as Mark J. Friedman,
DDS, past president of the American Academy of Esthetic
Dentistry—assert that either revolves around a philosophy of being
conservative. This is despite the fact that, as McLaren suggests, there have been some commercial interests that have
used the concept of no-prep veneers to promote
their laboratories and the materials that they market, he says. However, neither is
material-specific.
“It’s basically a technique or approach
that’s been talked about for many years, one that’s consistent
with our concept of minimally invasive dentistry and doing as little
damage as we can,” elaborates Terry Donovan, DDS, professor and
section head of biomaterials at the University of North Carolina School of Dentistry. “There is no one specific product used
for the technique, although some
manufacturers market more aggressively than others. However, all dental
laboratories that fabricate veneers will offer dentists no-prep or
minimal-prep veneers.”
The big question for Donovan is whether the no-prep
veneer is suitable for all, or even most, patients, as implied by some
advertisements. He says that the majority of patients that present
requesting veneers require more preparation than is implied in the
marketing materials for no-preparation veneers.
“I think the desire for dentists to avoid
cutting away tooth structure is one thing that
has precipitated this approach. I applaud the
conservative aspect of it, and there are cases
in which these types of veneers can be acceptably
placed,” notes Harald O. Heymann, DDS,
MEd, professor and graduate program director in the Department of Operative Dentistry, University
of North Carolina School of Dentistry.
“However, I personally believe that a
compensating reduction that is very minimal in
its depth and ensures preparations in enamel is
the way to go.”
According to Strasseler, long-term research has demonstrated a 94% survival rate for minimally invasive porcelain veneers.1 However, he also notes that while conservation of
tooth structure (ie, no-prep veneers) is
important, so is selecting the right treatment
modality based on the clinical findings
for each individual patient.1 Therefore, when it comes to ensuring appropriate procedures, patients seeking esthetic treatment
should undergo a comprehensive clinical examination that includes an
esthetic evaluation.1,2
“What we need to do first is identify our goal for the case, and determine what the patient wants and what their expectations are as far as color, tooth position, size,
shape, etc,” says Dino S. Javaheri, DDS,
a private practitioner in Danville, CA. “Then we need to look at where the teeth are right now and determine where they need to be. If we don’t do a thorough job
with case selection and treatment
planning, then what will happen is the veneers will either look bulky,
their colors will end up looking opaque, or the tooth position, size, or
shape will not meet the patient’s expectations.”
Things such as the midline position and whether or not it needs to be moved, how, and by how much; lip fullness and the manner in which it might be affected by
changes in the facial/lingual position of the teeth; incisal edge position,
occlusion, and tooth shape; and desired color change and whether or not
underlying color needs to be masked—all need to be considered and
analyzed when determining ideal materials for veneer restorations.
These factors also determine whether or not the patient’s teeth can
be left alone (ie, not prepared at all or prepared minimally) or will
require tooth reduction to accommodate the anticipated restorations.
“It’s important to take the patient’s concerns and desires into account.
If the patient doesn’t want to have any
preparation done, fine,” believes
Michael DiTolla, DDS, director of clinical
education for Distinctive Dental
Seminars. “Perhaps we won’t achieve
the best esthetics we could, but if the patient
is informed and willing to compromise, then he
or she has the final decision about what will
make them happy.”
This month, Inside Dentistry presents readers with a comprehensive overview of what is meant today
by no-prep, thin, and minimal preparation
veneers. In doing so, a discussion will be
offered of the development of the veneer
modality, as well as its preparation designs.
Practical issues surrounding case selection for
the placement of these varieties of the veneer modality will be discussed. Guidelines also will be presented to facilitate treatment planning veneer cases.
Where It All Began
John R. Calamia, DMD, professor and director of
esthetics at New York University College of
Dentistry—and the one credited by many as the father of the porcelain laminate veneer—recalls
that the development of the modality in
1982 was done with no
or little preparation.3 It was original research,
and the process needed to be reversible
in case it didn’t work, Calamia says.
Initial patients were established for the purpose of trying those veneers
on the facial surface of the tooth,
without any preparation; making an
impression; and plac-ing the restorations. Those first veneers were about 0.5 mm in thickness, and they tapered down to practically nothing at the margins, Calamia recalls. For
comparison, today’s newer thin veneers
claim thicknesses of less than 0.5 mm, but for
the most part, they
are closer to 0.3 mm as the minimum
thickness, he says.
“There is no question that if we look back historically, the porcelain veneer was always, from its inception, designed and developed to be a very conservative approach to restoring teeth with porcelain on the facial aspect,” explains Friedman. “The concept was to be extremely conservative to
maintain an enamel substrate.3”
As Calamia’s research progressed, what he and his colleagues observed
was that with the
veneers that were placed without any preparation,
the over-contouring of the teeth (ie, the
change in the emergence profile) over time
actually began to cause periodontal
problems.4 As a result, patients were then made
aware in advance of the need for stringent home
care in order to preserve the health of the
gingival tissues, he notes.
“We then realized that these veneers were securely bonded to the enamel, and it was very
difficult to remove them; they had to be ground off almost
completely,” Calamia remembers. “We
began to have confidence in the veneer system
as something that would be long-lived.”
Calamia and his team then determined that, from a periodontal standpoint,
it made sense to use a preparation, which would
make room for the laminate veneer. The slight
preparation he developed was a 0.5-mm reduction, with the 0.5 mm brought back, providing almost the original emergence
profile of the tooth with the new veneer.
“Minimum preparation is what the porcelain veneer restoration initially evolved from. Because it requires a certain minimum thickness, the porcelain veneer can be fabricated at least 0.3
mm,” explains Friedman. “If a tooth
is in normal facial position with adjacent
teeth, then you have to remove at least that
0.3 mm to 0.6 mm of tooth structure to prevent the tooth from being
over-contoured.5”
Unfortunately, as the veneer technique became more widely used, a
greater number of clinicians began to push the
envelope, Calamia observes. They started to replace “whole parts” of the tooth, rather
than working within the constraints of an individual tooth’s enamel,
he said. For example, some clinicians worked
into areas beyond the cervical and onto the
root surface. This was still a good technique in that most of the margins remained in enamel.
However, as preparations went deeper into the tooth, some of that dentin substructure was not as rigid as enamel, Calamia continues.
With the enamel sub-struture now being changed to a dentin substructure, which has more motility and, in general, more flex, clinicians were placing a very rigid veneer on something much more flexible.
That combination of rigid veneer and flexible
substrate was the cause, over time, of fracture
of some of the restorations, he
explains.
“This was a time when we only had bonding agents
in dentistry that had poor bond strengths to dentin,” Calamia
recalls. “These fractures usually occurred in crazing or cracking at
a specific area, without the total loss of the restoration.” Another
problem occurred if a large segment of tooth was replaced with porcelain.
In those areas where there was a transition in the restoration itself
between a very thick area of porcelain to a very thin area, this too could,
over time, cause fracture within the porcelain itself, he says.
Concurrent with the evolution of the veneer technique was the evolution and development of the materials used for the fabrication of these restorations. Stacked feldspathic porcelain was among the
first used. However, as other types of
porcelains (ie,
pressable ceramics) were used, problems arose
in terms of technicians’ abilities to make those restorations in very thin
thicknesses, Calamia recalls. As a result, the
minimum reduction
initially required for some pressed ceramics
was closer to 0.7 mm to 1 mm. This was
much greater reduction than the 0.5-mm
reduction that was necessary for the original feldspathic porcelains.
“As a result of using a different product, we were now advocating deeper preparations and, again, going
past the enamel and into the more flexible dentin layer of the tooth,” Calamia explains. “Better bonds to dentin over the past 10
years have been a great help but did not fully
compensate for this change in the substrate
bonded to.”
The Evolution of Minimal Preparation Design
Requirements
According to Friedman, as the veneer modality
evolved from its original no-preparation state to one of slight
preparation, a problem developed in that there
was no clear definition of what a tooth preparation
for veneers was. Did it mean touching a tooth
with a rotary instrument to create a finish line? Or, did veneer
preparations entail only roughening the tooth?6
“For some years a lot of us were doing
no-prep veneers. I placed probably more than
100 of them in the early to mid-1980s, and they
worked pretty well,” remembers Raymond
Bertolotti, DDS, PhD, clinical professor of
biomaterial science at the University of
California, San Francisco. “Then, we decided that a little preparation of the margin would be a good idea,
and so we started
doing that. Later, researchers found that
tipping the incisal edge enhanced the strength, and that just preparing the facial surface of the tooth was not as
strong as tipping the incisal.”
Specifically, an in vitro (bench-top) study by Castelnuevo, Kois, and colleagues showed that 2 mm of free-standing incisal porcelain and minimal facial preparation produced the strongest veneer design,7 Bertolotti said.
Bakeman notes that there has been a variety of in vitro studies through the decades on the lingual chamfer with varied results. However, that information does not always transfer clinically, she says.
“Porcelain veneers in which the preparations remain in enamel are shown to have a high degree of long-term success regardless of the
lingual preparation design,” Bakeman says. “Again, an enamel substrate appears to be of key importance.”
The original reason that veneers were developed was to have a very conservative method of restoring teeth that
would offer an alternative to the use of
full-coverage crowns, when appropriate, Calamia
says. During the late 1970s and early 1980s, most actors and actresses were having full crowns placed, for which the
reduction of tooth structure was almost three
times more than needed for a veneer to achieve
the same results.
“The whole idea was to have a very conservative, minimum reduction of tooth structure treatment that achieved the same results as a full-coverage crown,” Calamia says. “In our studies over
time, the veneer preparation
in the enamel of the tooth probably had a lot to do with the longevity of these restorations, some of which have now been in the mouth for more than 25
years.”
The introduction of pressed ceramics in the 1990s ushered in an era of
more aggressive preparations, Bertolotti says.
As mentioned previously, in order to fabricate pressed ceramic veneers, more room was required, thus
necessitating a millimeter or deeper preparation.
“If you’re going to press a ceramic of a millimeter or a little more, that’s about the thickness of the enamel on the facial surface of the tooth. This resulted in the removal of all the enamel, preparing down into dentin,”
Bertolotti explains. “In my opinion,
when you start breaking contacts, going through interproximals, and you’re in dentin, I don’t think
that should be called a veneer. I think that
should be called a reverse three-quarter
crown.”
In more recent years the motivation of manufacturers has been to move
away from aggressive preparations and create
esthetic veneer
materials that attempt to minimize the invasion
of dentin by being able to be bonded to enamel,
Bertolotti says. Echoing sentiments stated
earlier, he says that the profession has
“come back almost to where we were in the
late 1980s, except now
we’re using pressed ceramic, not brush-on
feldspathics.”
To Prepare, or Not to Prepare
When preparing teeth for veneer restorations, McLaren
emphasizes that the most important consideration is the substrate, which
ideally should be mostly enamel. While adhesive bonding to enamel is one of the obvious benefits of prep-less veneers, he says there is one problem with not slightly preparing enamel.
“Many teeth have a thin, amorphous layer highly rich in fluoride on the surface that does not etch as well as
cut enamel,” McLaren explains.
“Therefore, at least sandblasting or
very light enamel preparation is indicated. If you are bonding to mostly enamel and there is not an extremely high caries risk, bonded porcelain is the treatment of choice if there is a need for a
restoration.”
Today’s veneers can be layered or pressed, McLaren says, with the same
laboratory fabrication techniques being done
for prepped or no-prep veneers. “The
esthetic properties can be great for the right
case with no prepping, but it is actually
easier to achieve an esthetic result with tooth
preparation, since it provides more space to work with color, characterization, etc,” he explains.
While some welcome the more conservative approach to porcelain veneers that the no-prep veneers represent, there are concerns. For example, Heymann suggests that they are best placed in patients with undersized teeth and/or who have spaces between their teeth.
Further, Calamia cautions that when clinicians
encounter teeth that are overcrowded, broken
down, or have very dark staining, these are the
types of cases that require a little more
substance to the restoration and would
require preparation in an esthetically pleasing
and periodontally sound way.
According to Bertolotti, no-prep veneers offer advantages such as
reversibility. However, he says the cases
he’s seen often present with technical
problems, such as gin-givitis or mediocre esthetics.
“Minimal preparation veneers are usually the preferred technique,” Bertolotti says. “One key is to use stacked feldspathic porcelain to achieve good esthetics in a minimal
thickness, around 0.5 mm.”
What’s more, Friedman suggests that dentistry is witnessing a disturbing trend of trying to suggest to the patient population that a no-preparation veneer
treatment is available, without fully disclosing what the long-term cost is. Sometimes replacements will be needed,
since these restorations all wear out, and the
replacement might require a crown, he says.8
“For example, if the esthetics couldn’t be worked out and perfected and the veneers have been
replaced a couple of times, by now the tooth has been prepared pretty heavily,” Friedman explains. “Now it needs a crown, and we start going down that slippery slope of doing more and more dentistry as time goes on.9,10”
Differentiating Among No-Prep and Minimal Prep Veneer
Materials
The concepts driving the techniques used for placing veneers today have
come full circle, but still there may be questions concerning what differentiates a no-prep veneer from its otherwise conventional counterpart, of course beyond the obvious (ie, the extent of preparation and
thickness of the
veneer). For example, says Heymann, if
you’re comparing veneers fabricated from feldspathic porcelain, then
the primary difference between no-prep veneers and those that are made conventionally would be the presence or absence of some compensating reduction through minimal tooth preparation.
Donovan suggests there isn’t any difference. He sees the term “no-prep” as a marketing label designed to appeal to patients who would like to improve their smiles but are
reluctant to undergo the kind of procedures required with typical
restorative dentistry.
“The terms ‘no-prep or minimal-prep veneers’ refer to the technique of placing veneers on teeth with little or no preparation of the
underlying tooth structure, as opposed to a specific product or brand,” emphasizes Bakeman. “The confusion may arise from the fact that
manufacturers have moved
to meet the interest and enthusiasm of the
public in no-prep veneers by branding products
that are marketed to specifically satisfy their
needs for minimally invasive
protocols.”
However, it’s worth repeating that there is no
brand that owns the technique, Bakeman says.
While a specific brand of veneer may incorporate
a certain type of porcelain, the reality is that there are many types of porcelain that could do the job, she says. From a fabrication standpoint, the
critical determinants rely heavily on the
expertise and skill
of the ceramist, Bakeman adds.
“In addition, these restorations are extremely delicate before they are bonded to the teeth. As a result, it can be anticipated that there will be a higher number of remakes due to fracture at the fabrication or delivery phase,” Bakeman explains. “In the past this has been considered a part of the cost of doing business.”
All of the materials and situations need to be taken into account by the
practitioner in order to make a good choice, Friedman says.
Certain patients are not good candidates for
veneers at all. For example, whether
they’re thick or thin, veneers would not
be successful in certain patients with very
destructive occlusions or collapsed occlusal
vertical dimension, or teeth that are undergoing
very traumatic functional and parafunctional
activity, he points out.11,12
Clearly the materials used for veneers have evolved and changed from feldspathic porcelains to
pressed ceramics to newer, stronger modern
formulations.
Stacked Feldspathic Porcelain. Michael R.
Sesemann, DDS, president and accredited
fellow of the American Academy of Cosmetic
Dentistry, notes that clinicians have a greater
ability to layer feldspathic porcelain and
create esthetic presentations that can be highly variable and characterized. Alternatively, the feldspathic material enables dentists to retain the favorable
appearance of desirable tooth coloration by
allowing the creation of thin veneers that are
very translucent and simply replace the enamel on the most superficial
layers of the tooth, he explains.
Sesemann explains that feldspathic no-prep veneers are usually created in one of two ways: either
on a refractory die or refractory cast, or through a platinum-foil technique (ie, the platinum foil is applied onto the die and
the veneer is made on top of that foil so it can separate from the model).
When clinicians are faced with a tooth that is quite dark, with the
underlying tooth structure
discolored, the tendency is to make the
restoration a little bit thicker in the
porcelain in order to mask the discoloration.
This is an example of a clinical situation indicating that the veneer can’t be too thin, Friedman says. Here, as Heymann points out, compensating reduction can enhance the esthetic effects of the veneer, since it can be made slightly thicker to allow the incorporation of some opacious porcelain to improve the masking ability of the veneer.
Pressable Ceramics.
According to Friedman, these veneers
tend to be thicker due to the laboratory techniques used to produce the
final ceramic restorations compared to the
stacked feldspathic porcelain. Pressed ceramics
have usually required more tooth reduction and have not been desirable as a true veneer, notes Bertolotti. Bakeman echoes this sentiment,
noting that the stronger leucite-reinforced ceramics that can be milled and pressed have not routinely lent themselves well to thin veneer applications.
Lithium Disilicate. Recently introduced lithium disilcate materials have demonstrated the ability to be pressed in thin applications and show
great promise in this area, explains Bakeman.
The strength of lithium disilicate not only
streamlines fabrication of thin veneers, but it
also creates greater ease of handling at the
delivery phase, in effect reducing the
potential for fracture and subsequent need for
remakes, Bakeman has observed.
Putting Veneers into Perspective
Friedman and others believe that while the porcelain veneer is a conservative restorative alternative, it is not the end-all, be-all of minimally invasive approaches to esthetic treatments. That said, he believes that from a philosophical point of
view, the bonded porcelain veneer should return to its original inceptional
roots of being a conservative alternative
that is only one of other options.
“It isn’t at the height of being conservative. It’s closer to a crown than would be whitening, orthodontics,
contouring, or microabrasion, which are other
esthetic procedures. Direct bonding is
certainly the most cosmetic procedure
that’s the most conservative that we
have,” Friedman elaborates. “All of these procedures are very minimally invasive. The
porcelain veneer is not that animal, and I think we need to rethink the
idea of placing a lot of veneer restorations on a patient.”
Therefore, dentists need to assess the patient’s clinical situation to determine what the
patient wants, what they’re really looking
for (eg, color change, alternation of size/shape), Bertolotti says. If they’re looking for a
color change, then clinicians should think
about tooth whitening instead of veneers as the
first option, for example, he suggests. If they
don’t like the spacing of their teeth,
then dentists ought to think about clear
aligners (eg, Invisalign) or some other kind of orthodontics as a first option, rather than veneers, Bertolotti
continues.
“Once patients understand the options and decide they don’t
want those, then we might consider the veneer option and make some modifications. Some teeth you just can’t correct with bleaching or appliances, so those would be candidates
for veneers,” Bertolotti explains.
“You need to do a smile analysis, or other times a wax-up or computer imaging to determine and show
how things would look once they’re
changed.”
Patients need to be told about their options for
achieving the results they want, but many dentists overlook the more obvious and conservative
bleaching and orthodontics
and go right to veneers, which are tooth destructive, Bertolotti says. Other options should be ruled out first, he advises.
CONCLUSION
As Sesemann sees them, the minimal and no-prep veneers represent viable alternatives that, at their core, are supportive of the fact that enamel is a cherished human
tissue with unique properties that cannot be
duplicated after its removal. It should, therefore,
be clinicians’ primary goal in this day and age of conservative dentistry and responsible esthetics to preserve enamel at all times if possible.
“When you have enamel remaining on the tooth, you have retained a great deal of the biological
properties of that tooth in terms of its
resistance to deformation or stress, and when
the tooth isn’t changing shape underneath
your porcelain restorations, that tooth is more amenable to a successful future,” Sesemann asserts.
Heymann concurs, emphasizing that the key to success with porcelain veneers is to use intraenamel preparations, or
in the case of
no-prep veneers, obviously, to bond to enamel.
After all, once the preparation moves into the
dentin, problems could arise that include
debonding, marginal discoloration, sensitivity, etc, he says.
“The majority of problems encountered with
porcelain veneers result when the preparations
are extended into dentin. Research results are
unequivocal on this contention. Bonds to enamel
are far more predictable
and exceedingly more durable than those to dentin. Therefore, regardless of whether you use a
conventional veneer preparation or a no-prep veneer, you are better off to
bond to enamel as a substrate as opposed to dentin,” Heymann
advises.
When it comes to determining whether a no-prep or conventional veneer is
appropriate, the importance of case
selection cannot be overemphasized, says Javaheri. Clinicians should not
approach patients with a preconceived notion of
what technique they’re going to use, but
first identify the patient’s goals and
objectives and, based on their clinical
situation, work backwards to determine what
technique fits the patient, he explains.
The specific problem that patients have should be addressed intelligently by the dentist who is providing treatments, in terms of why they are using specific products or why they’re going in a specific technique direction, Calamia asserts. Unfortunately,
some of the advertising about today’s veneer choices goes directly to
patients and, as a consequence,
some patients present with requests for
specific treatments that may or may not be
appropriate for their situation, he says.
“The ethics involved in providing enough information to patients regarding what their specific needs are, really should be pushed in continuing education,” Calamia says. “There should be
more courses for dentists on ethics and the differences in materials, as opposed to so many courses geared to bringing patients in and selling cases.”
According to Friedman, even though clinical research and this esteemed panel of experts agree that natural dental enamel is important to long-term dental health, an obvious dichotomy still exists.
“On the one-hand, bonded veneers can be performed with outstanding
precision to preserve as much natural tooth
structure as
possible. However, just because a patient requests a restorative procedure,
it may not be appropriate for the long-term
health of their
dentition,” Friedman asserts. “Maybe the most difficult thing I have learned about the bonded porcelain veneer restoration in the past 25 years is
learning to tell patients ‘‘No!’”
REFERENCES
1. Strasseler HE. Minimally invasive porcelain veneers: indications for a conservative esthetic dentistry treatment modality.
Gen Dent. 2007;55(7):686-694.
2. Javaheri D.
Considerations for planning esthetic treatment
with veneers involving no or minimal
preparation. J Am Dent Assoc. 2007;138(3):331-337.
3. Calamia JR. Etched
porcelain facial veneers: a new treatment
modality based on scientific and clinical
evidence. N Y J Dent. 1983;53(6):255-259.
4. Calamia JR, Calamia CS. Porcelain laminate veneers:
Reasons for 25 Years of success. Dent Clin N
Am 2007;51: 399-417.
5. Friedman MJ. The enamel ceramic alternative: porcelain veneers vs metal ceramic crowns. J Calif Dent Assoc. 1992;20(8):27-33.
6. Friedman MJ. Current
state-of-the-art porcelain veneers. Curr Opin Cosmet Dent. 1993:28-33.
7. Castelnuovo J, Tjan AH, Phillips K, et al.
Fracture load and mode of failure of ceramic veneers with different
preparations. J Prosthet Dent. 2000;83(2):171-180.
8. Friedman MJ. A 15-year
review of porcelain veneer failure—a clinician’s
observations. Compend Contin Educ Dent. 1998;19(6):625-632.
9. Friedman MJ. Porcelain
veneer restorations: a clinician’s opinion about a disturbing trend. J Esthet Restor Dent. 2001;13(5):
318-327.
10. Friedman MJ. A
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J Esthet Restor Dent. 2009;21(1):1-3.
11. Swift EJ Jr, Friedman MJ. Critical appraisal.
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110-113.
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SIDEBAR 1
STOP: Indications and Caveats for No-Prep Veneers
According to John R. Calamia, DMD, there certainly is a place for the use of minimal prep and no-prep veneers in dentistry. What clinicians need to realize, and be willing
to inform their patients about, is that this place is a very small part of
what veneers can provide patients, he says.
Successful Spots for No-Prep Veneers
Most of the no-prep cases that Calamia has seen in
publications are diastema closures involving space between teeth,
which require little or no color change in those
areas. For those types of cases, dentists probably could use a no-prep or minimal-prep veneer, he says. For that
matter, some of the current composite resins, which for the most part would be just added to the surface of the patient’s tooth, could also be used, Calamia
suggests.
“In terms of its viability as a technique, I
have utilized no preparation veneers, but
it’s very important that I have the right
case type in which to place them,” explains Michael R. Sesemann, DDS. “Usually it is a lingually verted tooth with perhaps a collapsed posterior segment where you’re trying to fill out a buccal corridor and
make a person’s smile a little wider, or part of the dentition that can be treated with a purely additive technique.”
“The concept of no preparation at all on the
tooth really only works if a tooth is minimal
in its dimension, such as with a peg lateral,” believes
Mark J. Friedman, DDS. “Here you can create a porcelain veneer that
has the proper natural anatomy and confluence
with the soft tissues without
over-contouring.”
However, Raymond Bertolotti, DDS, PhD, cautions that no-prep veneers for peg-shaped laterals and lingually tipped teeth can be challenging for dentists and laboratories when they involve ultrathin stacked veneers. These are the exception, not the rule, he says.
According to Michael DiTolla, DDS, using no-prep veneers comes down to matching the suitability of a proposed dental treatment with what the patient is interested in; but that said, no-prep veneers are not a cure-all.
“No-prep veneers may work well with other
restorative dentistry being performed in the
same case in order to offer patients the
opportunity to finish their smile at the same time,”
suggests DiTolla. “For example, if an
anterior bridge or anterior crown is replaced, no-prep veneers could be judiciously placed adjacent to these restorations so that everything blends, creating an easy way for a patient to finish off their smile.”
Cautionary Caveats
Practicing clinicians and academics alike welcome a more conservative approach to esthetically treating patients, and all agree that preservation of enamel is key. However, they do have concerns related to the no-prep version of veneers.
Not Irreversible. Friedman
advises dentists to make an accurate diagnosis,
restore teeth when they need restoration,
and consider more conservative treatments when
appropriate (eg, whitening, microabrasion, orthodontics) and not think that veneers are completely innocuous. Even a no-prep veneer is going to require tooth preparation to remove it, he says. When the veneer is removed, the resulting tooth
preparation may, in fact, leave the tooth
always needing a restoration due to the lost tooth structure.
“A no-prep veneer, in my opinion, is not an
innocuous and reversible procedure,”
believes Friedman.
Beware of Over-Contouring. Harald O. Heymann, DDS, MEd, warns
that if a patient presents with otherwise normally shaped and sized teeth,
there may be no way
to avoid over-contouring the teeth without compensating
reduction through some tooth preparation. He
says that with no-prep veneers, there is no way to compensate for the additional thickness of the veneering material, so if the tooth is already of normal contour and size, then some degree of
over-contouring will result, Heymann
elaborates.
Gingival Response. As a
consequence of over-contouring, one of
Bertolotti’s concerns with no-prep veneers
involves the gingival response. “If the teeth are tipped lingually, dentists can achieve a nice margin and everything will be fine,”
Bertolotti says. “When a tooth is in the
normal position and ceramic is added to it, there is potential for some gingival troubles from over-contouring
and improper finishing.”
Fragile/Delicate in Nature. Heymann says that if the veneers are actually made as thin as some
manufacturers claim, which is as thin as 0.3
mm, they would be very difficult to handle and
fracture would be a real possibility.
“Even if dentists could successfully seat these veneers, polymerization shrinkage alone
could potentially crack a veneer that’s only 0.3 mm in thickness,” Heymann
explains. “The fragility of these veneers during try-in and cementation is certainly a
source of concern because of problems with
potential fracture.”
Less than Desirable Color/Esthetics. Bertolotti’s other concern
with no-prep or minimal prep veneers is that with something so thin, a great deal of opacity is needed in order for the veneer to change the color of the tooth. “The vast majority of no-prep ‘color correction’ veneer cases that I’ve seen look
very flat and artificial since they don’t
have any depth of color,” Bertolotti says.
Interproximal Finishing. Heymann is also concerned with the
inability to access the margins of no-prep veneers
interproximally to facil-itate
proper finishing. When
the margins are accessible, they can be smoothed and polished so that they are confluent with the contours of the tooth, he
explains. “If you attempt to smooth the interproximal areas with just a diamond strip, you may inadvertently lighten or open
the proximal contacts. The result is that the
patient will end up catching all kinds of foods between their teeth, which obviously is not
good from a periodontal standpoint,” Heymann says.
SIDEBAR 2
Some Considerations for Treatment Planning the Veneer Modality
“I think if we can achieve the esthetic results
we want with a veneer and keep our preparations primarily in enamel, veneers are far better alternatives than
crowns,” believes Terry Donovan, DDS. “On
the other hand, if the teeth are worn to a certain extent, sometimes we have to use
crowns, and often we use a combination of
crowns and some veneers, and which tooth receives what type of restoration depends on how much structure is left, as well as tooth position.”
Such determinations, however, are predicated on the
comprehensive examination that includes conversations with the patient about his or her goals and what they are willing to
accept in terms of compromise (eg, esthetics)
in order to preserve as much tooth structure as
possible, explains Dino S. Javaheri, DDS. Some
patients want perfection, so their expectations must be reviewed before
treatment planning, he says.
“With veneers, whether minimal prep, no-prep, or
conventional, it really is all about case
selection,” Javaheri says. “It’s definitely not a one-size-fits-all that will cover every patient.
Treatment planning has to be very
case-specific.”
Esthetic and Smile Design Considerations
Once clinicians have an understanding of what the
patient hopes to achieve with veneers, it’s important to evaluate the
midline position of
the teeth, Javaheri says. If the midline is off and no tooth structure will
be removed, then the laboratory can’t change that, he explains. So,
if it’s off before, and you do no prep, it’s going to be off
afterward as well.
He adds that lip fullness is another important consideration. If the patient has
a thin lip and porcelain is added, he or she could feel like they’re
scraping their teeth against their lip. If somebody has a very thick lip,
they won’t notice additional porcelain or that the teeth have been
built out, Javaheri says.
“With any veneer case, the incisal edge position is very
important, but it is especially so with no-prep cases because we’re
moving it forward,” Javaheri elaborates. “Additionally, when we
alter the incisal edge position, it could affect the patient’s
speech.”
Functional and Masticatory Considerations
“As with all restorative dentistry, the
management of occlusal factors is extremely important. It is important to
create an angle of guidance that does not create premature loading of the
teeth during function,” explains Betsy Bakeman, DDS. “The
greater the degree of structural and functional compromises presented in
the pre-operative situation, the greater the degree to which these
parameters must be managed.”
Tooth Size, Shape, and Color Considerations
What’s important about the tooth size and shape
lies primarily with the widths of the teeth, Javaheri says. If dentists are
just adding porcelain and they’re not reducing any tooth structure in
between the teeth, they limit what the laboratory can do to change the size
of teeth.
“If we have the two central incisors that are
being restored and one is 1 mm larger than the other one, it will still be
1 mm larger than the other one afterwards if it
is not prepared,” Javaheri explains.
Preparation Considerations
There is no one technique of anything that works for
every patient, explains Ed McLaren, DDS. When it comes to veneers, many
times clinicians need to slightly lingualize teeth for the final esthetic
result. This requires some preparations, he says.
Two other important esthetic considerations that will
determine if a veneer can be prep-less, McLaren
says, are:
- Is it going to be additive (ie, do you want to
increase the volume of the tooth esthetically)?
- Is the shade of the
tooth going to change? Note that you need 0.2
mm thickness of veneer for each shade grouping change (ie, A1 to A0 is one group; A2 to A0 would be two groups).
“The reality is that we have certain physical
and anatomical limitations within which we can work and have something
that, number one, looks good, but even more importantly, remains in what we call the confines of physiologic contours
of the crowns,”
explains Donovan. “Teeth are made to be shaped a certain way, and if we don’t prepare the tooth, then
we’re simply adding on to it.”
Answering the earlier question of whether the case is
additive and to what extent, or not, determines the need for preparation.
Adding porcelain to the labial surface, or to the incisal edge, could
result in over-contouring, Donovan says. As a result, most of the time in most patients,
clinicians need to provide very specific
preparations that allow for veneers that look good within the confines of
physiologic contours, he believes.
According to Bakeman, situations that can accept
additive-only protocols typically call for thin
veneers to control bulk and minimize over-contouring. Thin veneers take advantage of the optical properties of the underlying tooth structure and, as
a result, can be highly esthetic, she says. That of course requires the underlying tooth structure
to be of an acceptable range and need minimal,
if any, shift in color. The need to change color requires greater room
for a variety of porcelains to facilitate a significant
color shift.
“Certainly the design of the preparation is
important. However, the most important factor to consider is the
preservation of enamel. More extensive
preparations have an effect on the flexure of
the tooth, which can in turn have an influence in adhesive failures,” Bakeman says. “Studies have
demonstrated that adhesive
failures, which in their early phases are not detected clinically, are
quickly followed by catastrophic failures of the porcelain. While it may
appear that the porcelain fractured and that was followed by an adhesive
failure, the reverse is more likely to be true.”
“The preparation of a virgin tooth is part of an
overall treatment plan, and that doesn’t
come into play too many times in my
geographical area,” observes Michael R. Sesemann, DDS. “When it does, I’ve utilized on incisors both
the overlap chamfer design and a butt joint
coming off of the incisal edge, and both work
really well with the incisors.”
With canines, what influences his preparation design
is the presence of significant previous dentistry, Sesemann says. When there are a number of Class 3 composites on anterior
teeth or various areas of erosion or attrition,
those factor into the preparation design when treatment planning and
diagnosing a particular restorative solution, he says.
SIDEBAR 3
The Inside Look from...
Issue after issue, the feature presentations in Inside Dentistry deliver coverage of the relevant
and thought-provoking issues affecting the day-to-day practice within the dental profession. The underlying
concerns associated
with this important topic could not have been
brought to the forefront without the insights
shared by our knowledgeable and well-respected interviewees. For
their collective generosity of time and
perspective, we extend our sincere gratitude.
Betsy Bakeman, DDS, FAACD, FAGD
Accreditation Examiner and Chair of Accreditation
American Academy of Cosmetic Dentistry
Clinical Instructor
Kois Center in Seattle, Washington
Private Practice
Grand Rapids, Michigan
ebakeman@comcast.net
Raymond Bertolotti, DDS, PhD
Clinical Professor of Biomaterial Science
University of California, San Francisco
Fellow, American Academy of Dental Materials
rbertolott@aol.com
John R. Calamia, DMD
Professor and Director of Esthetics
New York University College of Dentistry
jrc1@nyu.edu
Michael DiTolla, DDS, FAGD
Director of Clinical Education
Distinctive Dental Seminars
mcditolla@mac.com
Terry Donovan, DDS
Professor and Section Head of Biomaterials
University of North Carolina School of Dentistry
terry_donovan@dentistry.unc.edu
Mark J. Friedman, DDS
Past President
American Academy of Esthetic Dentistry
Private Practice, Encino, CA
Center for Dental Aesthetics and Dental
Sleep Medicine
mfriedmandds@mac.com
Harald O. Heymann, DDS, MEd
Professor and Graduate Program Director
Department of Operative Dentistry
University of North Carolina School of Dentistry
harald_heymann@dentistry.unc.edu
Dino S. Javaheri, DDS
CE Course Director for The Aesthetic Revolution
University of the Pacific, San Francisco
Private Practice
Danville, CA
drj@drjavaheri.com
Ed McLaren, DDS
Director
UCLA Center for Esthetic Dentistry
emclaren@dentistry.ucla.edu
Michael R. Sesemann, DDS, FAACD
President and Accredited Fellow
American Academy of Cosmetic Dentistry
Private Practice
Omaha, Nebraska
msesemann@smilesonline.net
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