| Literature DB >> 27886272 |
Heleine M C Rêgo1, Thaís S Alves1, Eduardo Bresciani1, Li-Na Niu2, Franklin R Tay3, César R Pucci1.
Abstract
Tooth-coloured plastic dental fillings secured by adhesives to tooth structures are widely used to fix decayed teeth. Whereas laboratory tests demonstrate rapid deterioration of the ability of the adhesives to stick to dentine, clinical studies show that these fillings are relatively durable. This discrepancy suggests that the parameters used for simulating bond degradation in the laboratory setting do not correlate well with clinical outcomes. The present study examined the long-term tensile bond strength of resin composite fillings performed in real life and under different laboratory-simulated bonding conditions to identify parameters that may be used to forecast the durability of adhesive bonds created in dentine. Fillings placed in vivo were subjected to different periods of intraoral function. In vitro specimens were bonded based on whether simulated pulpal pressure (SPP) or thermomechanical cycling was implemented, and how long the completed fillings were stored in water. Thermomechanical cycling used in combination with long-term water ageing are useful in forecasting the decline in strength of resin-dentine bonds created in vivo. These parameters should be adopted for future evaluations. Conversely, the use of SPP does not appear to be a significant parameter in the simulation of long-term clinical deterioration of bond integrity.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27886272 PMCID: PMC5122885 DOI: 10.1038/srep37799
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Mean MTB values and standard deviations of the tested groups and statistical analyses within and between conditions (in vivo and in vitro).
| Evaluated Period | Conditions | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MTB | Simulated pulpal pressure | Aging | MTB | |
| 24 hours | 23.21 ± 3.91A, a | No-SPP | Water ageing | 24.96 + 3.00A, a |
| Cyclic ageing | 23.96 ± 1.77A, a | |||
| SPP | Water ageing | 17.65 ± 1.42B, b | ||
| Cyclic ageing | 19.49 ± 1.60B, b | |||
| 6 months | 14.17 ± 4.78B, a | No-SPP | Water ageing | 16.68 ± 4.13B, a |
| Cyclic ageing | 18.17 ± 2.53B, a | |||
| SPP | Water ageing | 14.33 ± 4.69B, a | ||
| Cyclic ageing | 17.89 ± 3.98B, a | |||
Different superscript capital letters denote differences within columns (within in vivo or in vitro conditions). Different superscript small letters denote differences within rows (comparison of in vivo with in vitro conditions in each evaluated period).
Figure 1Prevalence (expressed as percentages) of failure types after microtensile bond strength testing for all groups.
Adhesive: adhesive failure; CR: cohesive failure in resin; CD: cohesive failure in dentine; Mixed: mixed failure. SPP: simulated pulpal pressure; MOS: months.
Figure 2Scanning electron microscopy images for all groups.
A1) in vivo 24 hours; A2) in vivo 6 months; B1) without SPP storage in water - 24 hours; B2) without SPP storage in water - 6 months; C1) without SPP after thermomechanical cycling - 24 hours; C2) Without SPP after thermomechanical cycling - 6 months; D1) With SPP storage in water - 24 hours; D2) With SPP storage in water - 6 months; E1) With SPP after thermomechanical cycling - 24 hours; E2) With SPP after thermomechanical cycling - 6 months. Arrows indicate presence of bubbles on the dentine surface of fractured beams (D1 and E2) and on adhesive interface area of dentine slices (D2 and E1) in the groups in which SPP was performed.
Materials, manufacturer information, composition and batch number.
| Material | Manufacturer | Composition | Batch number |
|---|---|---|---|
| Magic Acid Gel | Vigodent; Bonsucesso, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil | 37% phosphoric acid | 006/10 |
| Adper Single Bond 2 | 3 M ESPE; St. Paul, MN, USA | BisGMA, HEMA, dimethacrylate, ethanol, water, photoinitiator, functional copolymer of methacrylate, polyacrylic acid and polyitaconic acid, silica nanoparticles | N289126BR |
| Grandio | Voco GmbH; Cuxhaven, Germany | BisGMA, TEGDMA (12%), inorganic particles (87%) and additive (1%) | 1129360 |
Abbreviations. BisGMA: bisphenol A glycidyl dimethacrylate; HEMA: hydroxyethyl methacrylate.
TEGDMA: ethylene glycol dimethacrylate.