Polyether Impression Material Guide
How polyether impression material performs on accuracy, hydrophilicity, and tear strength, and when to choose it over VPS for fixed prosthodontics.

Polyether Impression Material: A Clinical and Procurement Guide
Polyether impression material occupies a specific place in fixed prosthodontics: it is the elastomer clinicians reach for when capturing a subgingival margin in a moist field, or when a single accurate pour matters more than the option to repour days later. Introduced as Impregum by 3M ESPE and still sold under that name alongside the lower-viscosity Permadyne, polyether is a single chemistry rather than a family of viscosities layered together, and its behavior follows from that. The material sets through cationic ring-opening polymerization of aziridine end groups, an addition reaction that releases no volatile byproduct, so the set impression does not shrink from evaporation the way reversible hydrocolloid or condensation silicone does.
This guide sits within the broader impression materials procurement guide and looks specifically at where polyether earns its place against the addition silicones it competes with. The short version: polyether reads detail in the presence of moisture better than most alternatives, holds dimension well enough for multi-unit and implant work, and asks for more discipline in handling and storage than a clinician moving over from vinyl polysiloxane might expect.
What makes polyether chemically distinct
The defining property of polyether is intrinsic hydrophilicity. The polymer backbone carries polar ether linkages that lower the contact angle of the unset material against a wet surface, which means the light body flows into a sulcus carrying crevicular fluid or a film of saliva rather than beading away from it. Addition silicones achieve comparable wetting only through surfactants blended into the paste, and that wetting is a surface effect that can wash out. Polyether's affinity for moisture is structural.
That same affinity is the material's principal liability. A set polyether impression absorbs water if it sits in a humid environment or a disinfectant bath beyond the recommended interval, and absorbed water swells the impression and distorts the working cast. The handling rule that follows is strict: disinfect briefly, dry, and store in a dry environment, never sealed against moisture.
Polyether is also stiffer than VPS once set, with a higher durometer. High rigidity resists deformation during removal, which is part of why it records implant relationships accurately, but it also makes withdrawal harder across undercuts and raises the risk of fracturing stone in deep interproximal areas during separation.
Where the accuracy evidence actually points
Polyether's reputation for accuracy rests on a consistent finding across in vitro work: when polyether and VPS are compared directly on a reference model, polyether tends to show the lowest mean deviation, though the difference often falls short of statistical significance. In a full-arch implant study comparing high-rigid VPS, polyvinyl siloxane, and polyether, polyether deviated least from the reference model, with the authors concluding all three materials were clinically acceptable for full-arch implant-supported prostheses (PMID 33463965). A separate evaluation of multiple internal-connection implants reached the same direction of result, reporting that casts from polyether were more accurate than casts from VPS, with the splinted technique outperforming non-splinted regardless of material (PMID 24456531).
The practical reading is that material choice is a smaller lever than technique. A splinted open-tray approach with either polyether or a rigid VPS will outperform a sloppy impression in the more accurate material. Polyether's edge is real but narrow, and it is most worth claiming when the field is wet and the margin is deep, the conditions where its hydrophilicity does work that a silicone surfactant cannot.
Vinyl polyether siloxane: the hybrid question
Manufacturers responded to the polyether-versus-VPS tradeoff by engineering a hybrid, vinyl polyether siloxane, marketed to combine VPS dimensional stability with polyether wetting. A systematic review and meta-analysis of hybrid materials against their parent chemistries found that the hybrid improved tensile strength and hydrophilicity relative to both polyether and VPS, while dimensional accuracy was comparable across all three with no statistically significant differences, as reported in a systematic review and meta-analysis (PMID 38195442).
For a practice already stocking polyether, the hybrid is worth knowing about but not a forced switch. The accuracy ceiling is similar. The hybrid's argument is handling: better tear strength on thin margins and reduced moisture sensitivity at storage.
Clinical indications and where polyether falls short
Polyether is well matched to fixed prosthodontic impressions where moisture control is imperfect and dimensional fidelity over a single pour is the priority. Crown and bridge margins at or below the gingival crest, multi-unit fixed partial dentures, and implant transfer impressions are the core indications. Its high rigidity is an asset in implant work, where rotational accuracy of the coping inside the set material matters.
It is a poor choice in three situations. Deep, sharp undercuts make the rigid set material difficult to remove without tearing or fracturing the cast. Cases requiring multiple pours over several days are better served by VPS, which tolerates delayed and repeated pouring without the moisture-swelling risk. And patients or clinicians sensitive to taste will note polyether's bitter flavor, a minor point clinically but a real one chairside.
Handling protocol for a reliable pour
- Select tray and adhesive. Use a rigid stock or custom tray with polyether tray adhesive applied and allowed to dry. Polyether bonds poorly without its specific adhesive.
- Manage the field. Achieve hemostasis and retract. Polyether tolerates a moist sulcus better than VPS, but blood and pooled fluid still degrade margin detail.
- Dispense and load. Use the automix or Pentamix system for consistent base-to-catalyst ratio. Load tray body and syringe the light or medium body around prepared teeth simultaneously to avoid a cure-line between increments.
- Respect working and set times. Polyether has a relatively short working time and a snap set. Seat the tray before working time expires and hold without movement through the set.
- Remove in one firm path. The stiff set material rewards a single decisive withdrawal along the path of insertion. Rocking risks permanent deformation at undercuts.
- Disinfect briefly, then dry. Use a short immersion or spray per the disinfectant instructions, then dry the impression. Do not leave polyether in a humid bag or wet bath, which swells the material and distorts the cast.
- Pour within the validated window. Polyether holds dimension well for a delayed pour when stored dry, but the safest cast comes from pouring within the manufacturer's stated interval.
Procurement and inventory considerations
Polyether is sold as base-and-catalyst cartridges for automix dispensers and as bulk refills for the Pentamix mechanical mixer, with Impregum the standard medium body and Permadyne the lower-viscosity wash. A practice running occasional fixed cases can work from automix cartridges; a higher-volume crown and bridge or implant practice usually justifies the Pentamix for consistent mixing and lower per-impression cost.
Shelf life runs to roughly two years unopened, shorter once cartridges are in service, and storage should be cool and dry. Because polyether is a single material rather than a viscosity system, inventory is simpler than stocking a full VPS line of putty, heavy, medium, and light bodies. The reorder question for most practices is whether to keep polyether as the dedicated material for moist subgingival and implant cases while running VPS for everything else, which is a common and defensible split.
Verified distributors for polyether and its accessories include Patterson Dental, Henry Schein, and Benco. Cross-checking the cartridge and refill price across vendors before reordering is where a practice recovers margin on a material it buys predictably every month.
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References
Saini RS, Alshadidi AAF, Hassan SAB, et al. Properties of a novel composite elastomeric polymer vinyl polyether siloxane in comparison to its parent materials: a systematic review and meta-analysis. BMC Oral Health. 2024;24(1):54. PMID: 38195442. DOI: 10.1186/s12903-023-03830-1
Kurella KS, Thiyaneswaran N, Abhinav RP. Comparison of Accuracy/Dimensional Stability of High-Rigid Vinyl Polysiloxane, Polyvinyl Siloxane, and Polyether Impression Materials in Full Arch Implant-Supported Prosthesis: In Vitro Study. J Long Term Eff Med Implants. 2020;30(3):179-186. PMID: 33463965. DOI: 10.1615/JLongTermEffMedImplants.2020036008
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