Effects of disinfection and sterilization on the dimensional changes and mechanical
properties of 3D printed surgical guides for implant therapy - pilot study
The purpose of this research was to investigate the effects of disinfection and three
different sterilization methods on the dimensional changes and mechanical properties
of three-dimensional (3D) printed surgical guide for implant therapy. The objective
was to assess the effects of sterilization procedures in 3D printed drill guide templates
with destructive and non-destructive material testing.Fifteen identical drill guide
templates were produced using a 3D printer. The surgical guides were classified into
five groups: three controls, three disinfected (4% Gigasept®, 60 min), three plasma
sterilized, three autoclave sterilized (+ 1 bar, 121 °C, 20 min), and three autoclave
sterilized (+ 2 bar, 134 °C, 10 min). The templates were digitalized with a Steinbichler
SCAN ST 3D scanner. Length was measured under an SZX16 stereomicroscope. A scanning
electron microscope was used to study the surface morphology of the drill templates.
The hardness, and flexural and compressive strength were measured to assess any changes
in the physical characteristics of the material caused by sterilization. The drill
guide templates were also examined with a Dage XiDAT 6600 X-ray. During the X-ray
examinations, the following parameters were used: 100 kV voltage, 128 AVG averaging,
0.8 W power. One-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) was used to detect the difference
between groups.Evaluation of the hardness measurements of the various specimens shows
that the hardness of the material was not changed by the plasma sterilization (p =
0.0680), steam sterilization on 121 °C (p = 0.6033) or disinfection process (p = 0.1399).
The statistical analysis revealed significant difference in hardness strength of the
autoclave sterilized (134 °C) specimens (p = 0.0002). There was no significant difference
between the goups regarding the scanning electron microscopic and stereomicroscopic
examinations. There was no significant difference regarding the X-ray visibility of
the templates to the effect of the disinfection (p = 0.7844), plasma sterilization
(p = 0.4091) and steam sterilization on 121 °C (p = 0.9277) and steam sterilization
on 131 °C (p = 0.093). The effect of the sterilization was the same in case of both
flexural and compressive strength of the material.Our findings indicate that plasma
sterilization and steam sterilization at 121 °C were both suitable for sterilizing
the tested 3D printed surgical guides.