4.6 Review

Photoelasticity for Stress Concentration Analysis in Dentistry and Medicine

Journal

MATERIALS
Volume 15, Issue 19, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ma15196819

Keywords

biomechanics; didactics; photoelastic models; photoelasticity; stress concentration

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Photoelasticity is an optical technique used in medicine and dentistry to observe and understand biomechanics. In dentistry, it is mainly used in disciplines related to fixed prosthesis implants, while in medicine, it is predominantly used in orthopedic research. However, there are no reports on the use of photoelastic models as teaching aids in either field. Although photoelasticity has been widely used in research, its application in clinical learning has not been fully explored due to limitations in the characteristics of the results obtained.
Complex stresses are created or applied as part of medical and dental treatments, which are linked to the achievement of treatment goals and favorable prognosis. Photoelasticity is an optical technique that can help observe and understand biomechanics, which is essential for planning, evaluation and treatment in health professions. The objective of this project was to review the existing information on the use of photoelasticity in medicine and dentistry and determine their purpose, the areas or treatments for which it was used, models used as well as to identify areas of opportunity for the application of the technique and the generation of new models. A literature review was carried out to identify publications in dentistry and medicine in which photoelasticity was used as an experimental method. The databases used were: Sciencedirect, PubMed, Scopus, Ovid, Springer, EBSCO, Wiley, Lilacs, Medigraphic Artemisa and SciELO. Duplicate and incomplete articles were eliminated, obtaining 84 articles published between 2000 and 2019 for analysis. In dentistry, ten subdisciplines were found in which photoelasticity was used; those related to implants for fixed prostheses were the most abundant. In medicine, orthopedic research predominates; and its application is not limited to hard tissues. No reports were found on the use of photoelastic models as a teaching aid in either medicine or dentistry. Photoelasticity has been widely used in the context of research where it has limitations due to the characteristics of the results provided by the technique, there is no evidence of use in the health area to exploit its application in learning biomechanics; on the other hand there is little development in models that faithfully represent the anatomy and characteristics of the different tissues of the human body, which opens the opportunity to take up the qualitative results offered by the technique to transpolate it to an application and clinical learning.

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