1. Introduction
A significant number of medical devices’ parts are nowadays manufactured from polymeric materials [
1]. Polymers are used both as coating materials and for components made entirely of this material [
2,
3]. Currently, many researchers deal with the useful properties of polymer medical devices [
4]. The studies of functional properties determining the operational quality, i.e., strength, durability, and reliability of polymer-based medical devices, are of practical significance [
5,
6,
7,
8,
9]. The degradation of the surface layer of medical devices due to deformation and abrasive wear is one of the factors limiting clinical usefulness [
10,
11,
12,
13,
14].
Poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) has found wide use in the healthcare field. It is used in orthopedics, prosthodontic dentistry, and many other medical devices [
15,
16]. Due to the physical and mechanical properties of PMMA, it is often used. PMMA has good scratch and UV resistance, has a relatively high modulus of elasticity and hardness [
17]. In addition, in orthodontic applications, it is characterized by low moisture absorption, e.g., of saliva, in the oral cavity [
18]. PMMA is also used to produce orthodontic appliances, including biomechanical ones, for the treatment of malocclusion.
Orthodontic splints made of PMMA are used in the treatment of bruxism and pathological thegosis.
Bruxism is a cranio-mandibular dysfunction that is defined as a total parafunction of muscle activity, during the daytime and at night. It is manifested by grinding, tapping, or clenching of teeth. Thus, it has a detrimental effect on the quality of life. The prevalence of daytime bruxism in adults is reported to range from 22.1% to 31%, while sleep bruxism is manifested at 13% [
19]. Daytime bruxism affects females more frequently than males, while in sleep bruxism, males are equally affected as females, but this disorder has a tendency to decrease with age [
20,
21].
In the case of bruxism, the tooth enamel wears off, teeth gradually deteriorate, and constant stress on the jaw joint causes inflammation and deformation (
Figure 1). This condition occurs, among others, in people exposed to stress. In the air force of one of South American armies, bruxism occurred in up to 30.4% of the military crew [
22]. In [
23], it was found that bruxism resulted in 22 peak occlusal force measurements ranging from 50 to 200 N per night (7 h of sleep). These forces were measured using properly scaled piezoresistive sensing elements encapsulated in an orthodontic splint [
23].
Management of this disease is usually directed toward reduction of stress, relief of muscles spasm and pain, and tooth or restoration protection. The purpose of occlusal splints is to protect teeth and restorations from attrition and adverse traumatic loading. Depending on their designs, occlusal splints can also unload, stabilize, and improve the functions of the temporomandibular joint as well as reduce abnormal muscle activity, reduce muscle pain, and improve functions of the masticatory motor system. It is known that at the time of a spasm, the jaw joint experiences a load several times greater than the pressure on the teeth and joint during mastication of solid food. Therefore, patients with bruxism often complain of severe joint pain in the lower jaw area.
Figure 2 presents a model of teeth with supercontacts and an occlusal splint with a destroyed surface after usage during one night; the thickness of the material was 2 mm. The damage was probably caused by the material’s low resistance to contact loads. Depending on the worn surfaces on the splint, the dentist can determine the localization of supercontacts (blue color). The picture clearly shows of supercontacts, which can be photographed and used both for diagnosis and for medical purposes for the selection of orthopedic appliance design and dispensary supervision over the quality of treatment.
The researchers found that in places of contact with human teeth, deformations of polymer orthodontic appliances and attrition facets were observed [
24].
Mouthguards for patients with bruxism help to avoid fractures of orthodontic appliances during nocturnal attacks of bruxism. The degree of damage of orthodontic appliances is correlated with maximum muscle activity during sleep [
24]. During dreaming, the patient clenches their teeth so hard that it can cause failure of dentures or other prosthetic appliances. An occlusal splint prevents tooth displacement, especially in chronic bruxism, when the teeth begin to shift from constant friction in the dentition. The mouthguard/occlusal splint securely fixes them in the gums and does not allow them to move during the load.
For the occlusal splint/mouthguard to be ideal for the patient, it must be made individually. For the manufacture of occlusal splints, a special plastic is used, which is polymerized by pressure. The dentist takes impressions of the patient’s upper and lower jaws, while the technician takes care of the fabrication.
The main purpose of the mouthguard is to protect the patient’s teeth from damage. During a night spasm of the facial muscles, an occlusal splint is placed. Whether the case is of awake or sleep bruxism, occlusal splints should be in the oral cavity during the daytime and at night. For this reason, the splints should be invisible to others, not interfere with speaking or eating, and not feel like a foreign body in the mouth.
Due to that fact that orthodontic appliances are mainly used in advanced cases of bruxism, the mechanical strength and wear resistance of the materials used in the manufacture of the appliances are of great importance. All materials, including teeth tissues, are subjected to abrasion, and therefore, the results of comparative studies of wear resistance of different materials are of particular value.
The hardness of a polymer material is a measure of resistance to concentrated contact forces. Hardness is a measure of the surface resistance of a material to local deformations. It is one of the most important material properties from both a structural and a technological point of view [
25]. Static hardness tests are one of the most common tests of the mechanical strength of biomedical materials [
8,
11,
25,
26,
27,
28]. Contact forces can arise in orthodontic treatment of involuntary teeth clenching. Maximum occlusal forces in patients with bruxism range from 450 to 650 N [
29]. Mean forces can be 120 N [
30] or 380 N [
31]. Such concentrated biomechanical forces cause permanent deformation of orthodontic appliance materials at their points of impact. An example is the materials of fangs. In patients with bruxism treated with orthodontic appliances, the surface of the orthodontic appliances is subject to wear. The behavior of polymers under contact forces is different from that of metals. Polymer materials are viscoelastic; in addition, the properties of polymers change with time differently than in the case of metals [
32]. One of the experimental methods of assessing the wear resistance of polymers is scratch resistance tests [
33]. In a clinical situation, pathological chipping of the enamel on the incisal edge of the incisors leads to sharp edges on the edges of the chewing surfaces of the teeth. This is also the result of inaccurate treatment of the enamel surface and the edges of dental fillings. This condition contributes to the appearance of inequalities along the contour of the filling [
34]. In experimental studies, incomparability of indentation hardness and scratch hardness results was noticed [
35]. A possible reason is a different method of measuring and determining hardness. The indentation hardness, including Shore’s hardness, depends on the depth of the hollow of the needle of a certain shape and dimensions, which is loaded with a specific normal force to the surface of the sample [
36]. In the scratch test, the penetration depth is determined by the contact length between the leading edge of the indenter tip and the material indented [
37]. It is influenced by the hardness, modulus, and wear resistance of the material being scratched [
38]. Scratch hardness depends largely on the crack width, which is usually determined by means of an optical microscope coupled with a scratch test device. Visual assessment of the features is complicated and may be ambiguous. Many factors, including ambient light conditions, observation angle, color of the sample, and the inspector’s visual acuity, can significantly bias the observation [
39]. It is possible that the non-optical method is more suitable for assessing scratches on the surface of polymer materials. In a number of works, researchers have used indentation and scratch methods to evaluate polymer materials. It is therefore important to investigate whether the disagreement between indentation and scratch measurement methods results in differences in the hardness ranking of polymer materials.
In light of the above considerations, the purpose of this work was an experimental comparative assessment of indentation hardness and the wear of four selected polymeric materials used in the manufacture of orthodontic appliances. The hardness rankings of the tested materials was obtained using different hardness methods, and the correlations between the values obtained by the scratch and sliding wear methods were compared.
4. Discussion
Bruxism can result in the friction and wear of polymer materials that are used for manufacturing orthodontic appliances. Thegosis is another disease that affects the surface degradation of orthodontic appliances [
62]. Bruxism is the action of grinding of teeth without the presence of food, which is regarded as a response to stress and treated clinically as a pathological process [
62,
63]. Bruxism leads to pathological wear known as attrition, which is not related to the physiological process of food mastication. Attrition is tooth wear in dental terminology. Bruxism treatment should primarily be aimed at eliminating etiological reasons, especially psychological stress. Drug treatment for bruxism is quite promising; however, the use of drugs should take into account the side effects of medicaments [
64].
Nowadays, there is no effective method for the treatment of bruxism. The most effective and common treatment option of bruxism is the use of splints. However, the role of splints is limited to protect the teeth from abrasion, as splints do not affect the parafunction of masticatory muscle activity. Given the fact that during normal activity of the stomatognathic system, the period of maximum interdental contact during the day is 10–15 min, in patients with bruxism, this period of time can last 3–4 h, at a masticatory pressure four times above normal. Therefore, the choice of orthodontic appliance design should be approached taking into account the above factors [
65]. The process of wear, i.e., attrition, is the most common cause of wear degradation in the dental biotribological system [
66]. It occurs as a result of contact and cooperation between opposing teeth [
67]. The level of attrition is influenced by occlusal forces and the amount and geometry of wear products [
68]. Attrition is a variation of abrasion (wear resulting from cooperation between two bodies). As reported in [
69], wear of the enamel surface due to attrition is about 40 µm per year. Hardness of a polymer material is a measure of resistance to concentrated contact forces. Such forces can arise in orthodontic treatment of involuntary tooth clenching. The action of these forces can lead to permanent damage through local deformation of a material used for orthodontic appliances where concentrated biomechanical forces act, e.g., due to contact with canine cusps [
70]. Orthodontic appliances that serve to prevent the effects of these diseases should take over these pathological forces and movements to relieve pressure on teeth without a loss of functionality when used by a patient. At the same time, orthodontic appliances are susceptible to damage of their surface. Researchers have confirmed that the quantity determining the functional quality of orthodontic appliances under these loading conditions is hardness [
18]. Undoubtedly, wear resistance is an equally important feature [
9]. In general, wear depends on the hardness of the materials in the friction node, on the load, and on the friction path. The shape and protruding irregularities of the couple’s harder material act as microblades. Wear is caused by micro-cutting, scratching, and furrowing. Wear products in the friction area also influence the degree of wear [
71]. In clinical situations, damage to polymeric orthodontic appliances can be scratch damage furrows. Unfortunately, it has been shown that most polymer materials are prone to scratch damage [
32]. Such surface damage can be caused by sharp irregularities at the edge of teeth. Such irregularities can be created by, e.g., chipping of enamel at the incisor edge in the disease process. Another cause of irregularities is inaccurate enamel preparation and cavity filling. Such inaccurate preparation contributes to the formation of irregularities along the line of the filling [
31,
67]. When the surface of one body has a higher hardness than the antagonistic one, as it is in the analyzed case, there is rapid wear of the surface by micro-scratching [
72]. Scratching in the friction direction is evidence of abrasion wear of polymers [
73], so the scratching mechanism is related to sliding wear. It was more important in this work, however, to determine to what extent scratch resistance correlates with Shore indentation hardness due to the greater proliferation and practical use of the Shore indentation method. Hardness testing is comparatively simple, quick, and efficient [
74], Some researchers point out that scratch hardness testing is a method that gives different results than indentation hardness testing [
32]. However, in [
75], an analysis of correlation of indentation hardness according to Oliver and Pharr’s method and scratch hardness of polymeric materials, including PMMA, was undertaken. The authors stated that if the testing conditions are consistent, scratch hardness and indentation hardness appear to be quite similar for almost all materials. At the present stage, this is a purely phenomenological observation [
75], which partly justifies the correlation dependencies presented in this paper. In [
75], the authors also stated that the indentation hardness according to Oliver and Pharr’s (O&P) method depends on recovery characteristics from the unloading curve. In the case of some polymer materials, a large proportion of elastic deformation under the influence of the indenter has a significant impact on the indentation hardness according to the O&P method. However, in the scratch hardness test, the effect of recovery characteristics of the material is not as obvious as in the case of indentation [
75]. However, this phenomenon has not been demonstrated in the indentation tests of PMMA, which was the subject of research in this article. It has been shown for melamine–formaldehyde polymer (MF). It is probably related to the fact that the penetration depth during the indentation of MF is small. However, for other polymers, including PMMA, the penetration depth is large enough to ensure contact mainly with the conical part of the Rockwell indenter [
75]. It is possible that when testing with the Shore D indenter, which is tapered and which also has a rounded tip of the cone, similar phenomena as when using the Rockwell indenter may occur. This relationship was also confirmed in [
76].
The highest statistical compatibility of
Hsprofil from the scratch test with the Shore indentation test, which is commonly used in the evaluation of polymer materials, indicates the usefulness of
Hsprofil in comparative tests and the creation of a ranking of the surface layer properties of materials. The
Hsprofil measure allows to capture the impact of plastic pile-up flow under the action of the indenter to a greater extent than
Hsmic, which varies for polymer materials [
77]. In contrast, the size of
Sar is the measure that best describes the surface damage profile [
40] and allows us to capture the pile-up deformation and elastic recovery of polymeric materials (this phenomenon mainly affects the side walls of the crack furrow). From a practical (engineering) point of view and given the normative requirements [
78], the
SWmic measure, determined using an optical microscope, which is the quantity needed to calculate
Hsmic, should be used. However, in scientific studies of the contact strength of the surface layer of polymer materials, one should also consider the use of values obtained with the use of a contact profilometer. The values of
War and the
ShD correlation coefficient are positive and similar to those obtained in the scratch analysis using the contact profilometer. The evaluation of the correlation strength shows a low correlation and a clear relationship. Compared to metals, there are only a few theoretical models for the wear of polymer and polymer composites, and there are no universal governing theories [
79]. In [
80], the wear rate equation of polymer plastics contains the indentation hardness. In addition, in much earlier papers [
81,
82,
83], an equation for the wear of polymers containing indentation hardness has been given. However, some papers, such as [
84], present wear equations independent of hardness. In analyzing the test results, it should also be taken into account that sliding wear tests were conducted under wet conditions in an artificial saliva bath at a temperature of 37 °C. The tribological behavior of polymers under lubricated conditions may significantly differ from dry contacts, due to the effects arising from the presence of a lubricant [
76]. Artificial saliva in the present situation acts as a lubricating medium. It seems that at least one mechanism—hydrodynamic lubrication—may be relevant in the situation described. Since polymers, in general, have relatively low elastic modulus, hydrodynamic effects can become significant at much lower speeds than in the case of metals [
76]. However, the obtained wear indicates that the kinematic couple friction conditions adopted according to [
69], characterized by a low frequency corresponding to the mandibular movement frequency, may have influenced the occurrence of mixed and boundary lubrication. Testing in artificial saliva can also lead to hydrolytic degradation, chiefly deteriorating surfaces of polymer material samples being in contact with liquid. Saliva is of physiological importance and is constantly present in the human mouth. Saliva is in contact with the surfaces of solids in the mouth. They are covered with a layer of absorbed saliva proteins and acquired pellicle. Such a coating is formed after a few seconds in the mouth on any hard surface. [
69,
85]. It has been found that amorphous polymers are more prone to hydrolytic degradation than crystalline ones and linear polymers than branched ones, polymers of higher molecular weight. Degradation depends on the presence of specific chemical groups in the molecule, including ester, amide, and urea groups [
86]. The intensity of degradation also depends on the condition of material surfaces, defects in the material, and the type and percentage of additional substances [
86,
87]. The synergistic interaction of the described factors translates into a low correlation between
War and
ShD. In light of the results of PCA, in which
War was shown to explain only 4% of the total variance in test results, and given the directions of the vectors of these variables, which are shown in
Figure 11, it can be concluded that
ShD is a measure with little dependence on
War. The ranking of the sliding wear resistance of the tested orthodontic materials should be made separately.
Effective use of
ShD as a useful measure for ranking orthodontic acrylic materials can only be limited. Inference from differences in Shore hardness can be difficult because differences in Shore hardness may be negligible for similar materials with identical purpose. An example is the paper on the modification of PMMA for the denture base [
88]. The authors of this interesting paper showed the impact of material modification on a number of mechanical properties but not in the case of
ShD. They claimed that some differences in Shore hardness are shown but they are insufficient to evaluate the differences, which can be influenced by various factors, including surface porosity and residual monomer concentration.