| Literature DB >> 28018569 |
Roodabeh Koodaryan1, Ali Hafezeqoran1.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Polyamide polymers do not provide sufficient bond strength to auto-polymerized resins for repairing fractured denture or replacing dislodged denture teeth. Limited treatment methods have been developed to improve the bond strength between auto-polymerized reline resins and polyamide denture base materials. The objective of the present study was to evaluate the effect of surface modification by acetic acid on surface characteristics and bond strength of reline resin to polyamide denture base.Entities:
Keywords: Acetic acid; Auto-polymerized resin; Bond strength; Polyamide; Silica coating
Year: 2016 PMID: 28018569 PMCID: PMC5179490 DOI: 10.4047/jap.2016.8.6.504
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Adv Prosthodont ISSN: 2005-7806 Impact factor: 1.904
Materials used in this study
| Material | Manufacturer |
|---|---|
| Carboxylic acid | Merck, Darmstadt, Germany |
| Ethanol | Merck, Darmstadt, Germany |
| Rocatec system | 3M ESPE AG, Seefeld, Germany |
| Silane coupling agent | Silane Bond Enhancer, Pulpdent Corp. |
| Polyamide | Vertex ThermoSens, Soesterberg, Netherlands |
| GC RELINE | GC Reline Hard, GC America, Alsip, IL, USA |
| Triplex autopolymerizing resin | Triplex, Ivoclar Vivadent, Liechtenstein |
Fig. 1Samples were mounted into a metal jig using acrylic resin material.
Results of two-way ANOVA test
| F | Mean squares | Sum of squares | df | Variable (source) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| .001* | 102.211 | 3,351.411 | 6,702.823 | 2 | Surface treatment |
| .001* | 24.631 | 807.626 | 807.626 | 1 | Resin |
| .001* | 14.386 | 471.691 | 943.383 | 2 | Interaction |
| 32.789 | 2,557.546 | 78 | Error | ||
| 38,472.085 | 84 | Total |
*Significantly different at P < .05.
Mean and standard deviation of shear bond strength values and differences between treatment groups (MPa)
| Group | Mean (SD) | Difference | |
|---|---|---|---|
| G | T | ||
| A | 18.02b | 33.20a | A |
| A | 20.92a | 25.26a | S |
| B | 5.99a | 5.07a | N |
A: Surface treatment using acetic acid, S: Silica coating followed by silane application, N: No treatment, T: Triplex reline resin, G: GC reline resin.
Values with distinct upper case subscript letters (A-B) are significantly different (P < .05).
Values with the same lower case subscript letters (a-b) are not statistically different (P > .05).
Fig. 2AFM images of polyamide after treatment with acetic acid (A), silica coating (B), and without any treatment (C).
Fig. 3ATR-FTIR spectra of the polyamide after treatment with acetic acid (a) and without any treatment (b).