Matt Drury
Active Member
Full Member
- Messages
- 198
- Reaction score
- 94
Hello everyone!! I was curious as to what denture liner materials everyone is using and what you like about the material that makes it your "go to" denture liner?
For ?
chairside reline hard acrylic, never do them
temp softliner immediate denture, permasoft, usable for about 6 months until first reline, direct impression but lab processed,
temp softliner, immediate denture, coe-soft, usable for about 6 weeks,
Tissue conditioning, hydro-cast,
Functional Impressions hydro cast,
Permanant softliner Molloplast B, but will try out Luci-soft on next order,
I used versacryl on one case with particularly vicious undercuts, didn't work as well as I had hoped, but the patient would have been better served with bone grafts.
The intent of my question was to gather information about what denture reline/rebase materials were most commonly used, and what you guys liked/disliked about those materials. I do work for a dental product manufacturer called Whip Mix Corporation who is a sponsor of DLN. We have introduced a new reline/rebase material that we have brought to market, that I would like to get the word out there about this new long term denture reline material. But my intentions of this thread was to gather information on more commonly used materials and what people liked and disliked about them, so I could present that information to our sales team and R&D team to see if we can addresses those common issues with modern reline/rebase materials that our Preference Soft Denture Liner may solve or fix.Are you asking us for advice or are you here to sell us stuff?
You guys sell a polyether impression material that is comparable to 3m Impregum? (Not PVS).
FWIW I have had Coe Soft in place for up to nine months and it is a bit cloudy but still intact....I use coe soft to establish whether or not a soft liner will work for the patient. If it works after about a month or so I will replace with molloplast. The nice thing about coesoft is that you can add to it successfully...take care and keep well..For ?
chairside reline hard acrylic, never do them
temp softliner immediate denture, permasoft, usable for about 6 months until first reline, direct impression but lab processed,
temp softliner, immediate denture, coe-soft, usable for about 6 weeks,
Tissue conditioning, hydro-cast,
Functional Impressions hydro cast,
Permanant softliner Molloplast B, but will try out Luci-soft on next order,
I used versacryl on one case with particularly vicious undercuts, didn't work as well as I had hoped, but the patient would have been better served with bone grafts.
For ?
chairside reline hard acrylic, never do them
temp softliner immediate denture, permasoft, usable for about 6 months until first reline, direct impression but lab processed,
temp softliner, immediate denture, coe-soft, usable for about 6 weeks,
Tissue conditioning, hydro-cast,
Functional Impressions hydro cast,
Permanant softliner Molloplast B, but will try out Luci-soft on next order,
I used versacryl on one case with particularly vicious undercuts, didn't work as well as I had hoped, but the patient would have been better served with bone grafts.
I have also seen Molloplast B used to retain implant overdentures in place of a snapon attachment like a locator. There is a special type of implant abutment shaped like a football. The Molloplast B is processed in the lab over the abutment....At a recent seminar one of the oral surgeons said that method works very well....but I cannot find a source for those elongated football style abutments....For ?
chairside reline hard acrylic, never do them
temp softliner immediate denture, permasoft, usable for about 6 months until first reline, direct impression but lab processed,
temp softliner, immediate denture, coe-soft, usable for about 6 weeks,
Tissue conditioning, hydro-cast,
Functional Impressions hydro cast,
Permanant softliner Molloplast B, but will try out Luci-soft on next order,
I used versacryl on one case with particularly vicious undercuts, didn't work as well as I had hoped, but the patient would have been better served with bone grafts.