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Soft Liner
What is a soft liner and why did your dentist place it in your
new denture?
A temporary soft liner is placed in a new or old
denture in order to (1) help improve the health of your gum tissues by absorbing some of
the pressures of mastication ( acts as a tissue conditioning material ) and (2) helps to
determine the maximum retention possible by utilizing undercuts in the bone and gum which
hard liners may not be able to negotiate without causing irritation. Soft liners will
spring around these undercuts and allow for greater retention than hard liners might be
able to produce in the same mouth. If we find that temporary soft liners provide enhanced
retention, we will then be able to determine if we should replace them with a more
permanent type of soft liner in the future or whether a hard liner is indicated.
Important Instructions
Temporary soft liners require special care and attention in order
for them to produce the desired results. The following suggestions are designed to assist
you in the maintenance of your new denture.
- Do not remove the prosthesis from your mouth for the first 24
hours. This is extremely important ! The material that is placed in your
denture will stay soft for the first 24 hours and will shape itself to your oral tissues
during that first 24 hour period.
- After the first 24 hours, you may remove the denture once every 12
hours for the first two days. At each removal, please rinse the denture with warm water
only. Do not use any of the commercially available cleaners. If need be, you can
brush the tooth part of the denture (the white teeth on) with toothpaste and a soft
toothbrush. The softliner is still very fragile and will tear if subjected to chemical or
mechanical cleaning
- During the next week you may remove the denture as often as you
like, still keeping in mind that the liner is fragile and must be treated with care. The
pink plastic may be brushed gently, trying to avoid the soft liner.
- If possible try not to use any denture adhesive, especially
during the first 72 hours. We are, once again, trying to ascertain the amount of
available retention. Using adhesives will only tend to confuse the issue.
- For the first 24 hours you should try to maintain a softer diet.
After that trial period, you should eat as regular a diet as possible so that the
softliner can mold itself to your tissues until normal function.
- We may be replacing this softliner on a regular basis until 1) the
tissues heal adequately or 2) we have determined that the retention for your new denture
is maximized. Further instructions will be given to you at that time.
Please be sure to bring your old dentures with you at each
recall visit just in case your dentist determines that relining your softlined denture is
required. This would necessitate sending your denture to the laboratory.
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