| Literature DB >> 29491200 |
Daisuke Araoka1, Keiichi Hosaka1, Masatoshi Nakajima1, Richard Foxton2, Ornnicha Thanatvarakorn3, Taweesak Prasansuttiporn4, Ayaka Chiba1, Kento Sato1, Masahiro Takahashi1, Masayuki Otsuki1, Junji Tagami1.
Abstract
We evaluated the effect of different curing strategies for universal adhesives on micro-tensile bond strength (μTBS) between resin cement and dentin and/or between resin cement and indirect resin composite. Flat coronal dentin surfaces and composite resin disks were pretreated with silane-containing universal adhesives, with or without light-curing on the dentin-side and/or composite resin disk-side. Resin disks were luted onto the pretreated dentin surfaces with the corresponding dual-cure adhesive resin cements and light-cured, and cut into beams after 24-h water storage. After 0 or 10,000 thermocycles (5ºC/55ºC) in a water bath, the μTBS of the composite resin disk-dentin beam was tested. The μTBS was highest when universal adhesives were applied to both the dentin- and the indirect composite resin disk-side, followed by light-curing. Thermocycling decreased μTBS in all but the Scotchbond Universaltreated group, with light-curing on both sides. The effect of curing strategies is dependent upon the materials.Entities:
Keywords: Dual-cure resin cement; Indirect restoration; Micro-tensile bond strength; Thermocycle aging; Universal adhesive
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29491200 DOI: 10.4012/dmj.2017-240
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dent Mater J ISSN: 0287-4547 Impact factor: 2.102