Meeting high functional and aesthetic demands with all-ceramic concepts
Case by DT Tomas Forejtek, Forejtek Dental Lab and Dr Ladislav Gregor, Sorriso Dental Clinic
In prosthodontics, assessing the individual needs and expectations of every patient is a crucial factor on the road to success. When it comes to producing fixed dental prostheses, the art is in tailoring the material combination, framework design and finishing concept precisely to the case-specific functional and aesthetic demands. In this context, the availability of high-performance evaluation tools and the freedom to choose between different variants of high-strength ceramics is worth gold.
CASE EXAMPLE
Take the case of a middle-aged female patient: She presented with very unsatisfactory metal-ceramic crowns (Fig. 1) and asked for an aesthetic improvement of the situation. The crowns on her maxillary central incisors and the right lateral incisor clearly needed to be replaced not only for aesthetic, but also for functional reasons. As anterior interferences were present and orthodontic treatment was not an option, the decision was made to select a ceramic material with a particularly high strength – KATANA™ Zirconia HT (Kuraray Noritake Dental Inc.) – and to opt for a design that would support the incisal edge with zirconia. Consequently, porcelain layering (with CERABIEN™ ZR, Kuraray Noritake Dental Inc.) would be limited to the vestibular region. The laboratory procedure – including shade determination and reproduction with the aid of the eLAB® shade matching system* – is illustrated in Figures 2 to 9.
*The eLAB® system is a registered trademark of Sascha Hein. It is an independent tool for dental shade determination and communication and is not developed or distributed by Kuraray Noritake Dental Inc.

Fig. 1. Initial clinical situation.

Fig. 2. Situation after removal of the existing crowns and preparation of the tooth structure for the planned all-ceramic restorations.

Fig. 3. Shade determination with the eLAB® system.

Fig. 4. Layering map for the use of CERABIEN™ ZR on all three crowns.

Fig. 5. Layering procedure: Shade verification.

Fig. 6. Try-in of the crowns to assess the fit and the shade match.

Fig. 7. Palatal view of the crowns on the model.

Fig. 8. Frontal view of the crowns on the model: A natural surface texture is obtained.

Fig. 9. Natural look of the restorations.
THE RESULTS

Fig. 10. Crowns after adhesive cementation with PANAVIA™ V5 (Kuraray Noritake Dental Inc.).

Fig. 11. Aesthetic treatment outcome.
A precise reproduction of the patient’s tooth shade, despite the challenging individual aesthetics.
THE KEY TO SUCCESS: INDIVIDUAL APPROACH, HIGH-QUALITY MATERIALS
The present case is a perfect example of an aesthetically and functionally challenging situation that needed an individual treatment approach. By taking into account the patient- and case-specific requirements and using our material-related knowledge wisely, it was possible to develop an adequate treatment plan. High-quality materials and a smartly selected design concept lay the foundation for long-term success. Valuable tools used during porcelain layering (specifically the eLAB® system) – on the other hand – paved the way for a precise reproduction of the patient’s tooth shade, despite the challenging individual aesthetics: The crowns were delivered on the first attempt.
Dental technicians:

LADISLAV GREGOR
Ladislav Gregor is a prosthodontist at Sorriso Dental Clinic in Brno, Czech Republic. A Masaryk University graduate (2005), he later served at the University of Geneva and earned both a Dr. Med. Dent. (Geneva) and a Ph.D. (ACTA Amsterdam). He has published extensively in adhesive and reconstructive dentistry, lectures internationally, is a certified CADE member, and serves on the Scientific Council of the Czech Dental Chamber.

TOMAS FOREJTEK
Tomas Forejtek is a dental technician in Brno specializing in aesthetic ceramic restorations. After graduating top of his class in 2001, he advanced to head of a leading dental laboratory and trained internationally with renowned mentors. In 2010, he opened his own lab, and since 2016 he has focused on single maxillary central incisor work with the eLAB protocol, becoming an official eLAB instructor in 2018.
- 9 sep 2025