| Literature DB >> 29930791 |
Neslihan Tekçe1, Safa Tuncer2, Mustafa Demirci2.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To evaluate the effect of prolonged sandblasting on the bond durability of dual-cure adhesive resin cement to computer-aided design and computer-aided manufacturing (CAD/CAM) restoratives.Entities:
Keywords: Computer-aided design and computer-aided manufacturing (CAD/CAM) restoratives; Dual-cure adhesive cement; Microtensile bond strength; Surface roughness
Year: 2018 PMID: 29930791 PMCID: PMC6004352 DOI: 10.4047/jap.2018.10.3.211
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Adv Prosthodont ISSN: 2005-7806 Impact factor: 1.904
Materials used in this study
| Material | Ingredient |
|---|---|
| Clearfil Ceramic Primer (Kuraray Medical Inc., Tokyo, Japan) | Ethanol (> 80%) |
| 3-TMSPMA (< 5%) | |
| 10-MDP |
TMSPMA: trimethoxysilylpropyl methacrylate; MDP: Methacryloyloxydecyl dihydrogen phosphate; Bis-GMA: Bisphenol A glycidyl methacrylate; UDMA: Urethane dimethacrylate; Bis-EMA: Bisphenol A polyethethylene glycol diether dimethacrylate; TEGDMA: Triethylene glycol dimethacrylates.
Microtensile bond strength (MPa) (median (25th–75th percentile) of the groups and the number of cohesive failures from blocks (n = 30)
| Groups | Aging | LAVA | VITA Enamic |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 (15 s) | Baseline | 64.5 (54.55 – 70.85)Aa1 | 60.1 (49.25 – 65.4)Aa1 |
| (6) | (4) | ||
| Thermocycles | 41 (31.5 – 48.15)Bax | 33 (30.1 – 36.2)Bbx | |
| (3) | (−) | ||
| 2 (30 s) | Baseline | 66.7 (52.2 – 78.3)Aa1 | 54.5 (48.25 – 59)Ab1 |
| (3) | (2) | ||
| Thermocycles | 49.7 (41.95 – 52.75)Bay | 35.3 (30.35 – 39.5)Bbx | |
| (−) | (−) | ||
| 3 (60 s) | Baseline | 62.6 (59.5 – 70)Aa1 | 37.2 (34.35 – 49.05)Ab2 |
| (1) | (1) | ||
| Thermocycles | 44.80 (35 – 51.35)Baxy | 22.8 (21.15 – 24.7)Bby | |
| (−) | (−) |
• Means followed by distinct capital letters (A-B) represent statistically significant differences in each column (Baseline thermocycled specimen comparisons for each group) (P < .05).
• Means followed by distinct small letters (a-b) represent statistically significant differences in each row (P < .05).
• Means followed by distinct numbers (1-2) represent statistically significant differences between baseline value comparisons of groups in each column (P < .05).
• Means followed by distinct small letters (x-y) represent statistically significant differences between thermocycled values comparisons of groups in each column (P < .05).
Surface roughness values (Ra, µm) (median (25th–75th percentile) of the groups (n = 15)
| Groups | LAVA | VITA Enamic |
|---|---|---|
| 1 (15 s) | 2.84 (2.57–3.12)Aa | 2.55 (2.3–3.04)Aa |
| 2 (30 s) | 3.23 (2.91–3.56)ABa | 2.91 (2.32–3.13)Aa |
| 3 (60 s) | 3.31 (3–3.73)Ba | 3.91 (3.63–6.67)Bb |
•Means followed by distinct superscript capital letters (A-B) represent statistically significant differences in each column (comparison between groups) (P < .05).
•Means followed by distinct superscript small letters (a-b) represent statistically significant differences in each row (P < .05).
Fig. 1Observation of LAVA surfaces: (A, C, E): top surfaces of sandblasted CAD/CAM blocks; (B, D, F): cross-sectional view; the specimens were sandblasted for 15 seconds, 30 seconds, and 60 seconds. The top surface figures show a rough surface for LAVA CAD/CAM blocks after sandblasting. However, a small crack is observed on the surface of the LAVA sample that was sandblasted for 30 seconds.
Fig. 2Observation of VITA surfaces: (A, C, E): top surfaces of sandblasted CAD/CAM blocks; (B, D, F): cross-sectional view; the specimens were sandblasted for 15 seconds, 30 seconds, and 60 seconds. The top surface figures show a rough surface for VITA CAD/CAM blocks after sandblasting. Irregularities and deep holes are present on the surface of VITA samples that were sandblasted for 30 seconds and 60 seconds.