| Literature DB >> 30719490 |
Mina Aker Sagen1, Ketil Kvam2, Eystein Ivar Ruyter2, Hans Jacob Rønold1.
Abstract
To evaluate debonding mechanism of zirconia and lithium disilicate cemented to dentin mimicking what could occur in a clinical setting. A null hypothesis of no difference in tensile bond strength between groups of zirconia and lithium disilicate cemented with resin cements was also tested. Zirconia rods (n = 100) were randomly assigned to two different surface treatment groups; air borne particle abrasion and hot etching by potassium hydrogen difluoride (KHF2). Lithium disilicate rods (n = 50) were surface etched by hydrofluoric acid (HF). Five different dual cure resin cements were used for cementing rods to bovine dentin. Ten rods of each test group were cemented with each cement. Test specimens were thermocycled before tensile bond strength testing. Fracture morphology was visualized by light microscope. Mean surface roughness (Sa value) was calculated for randomly selected rods. Cohesive fracture in cement was the most frequent observed fracture morphology. Combination of adhesive and cohesive fractures were second most common. Fracture characterized as an adhesive between rod and cement was not observed for KHF2 etched zirconia. Highest mean tensile bond strength was observed when cementing air borne particle abraded zirconia with Variolink Esthetic (Ivoclar Vivadent). All surface treatments resulted in Sa values that were significant different from each other. The number of cohesive cement fractures observed suggested that the cement was the weakest link in bonding of zirconia and lithium disilicate.Entities:
Keywords: Zirconia; ceramics; resin cement
Year: 2019 PMID: 30719490 PMCID: PMC6346715 DOI: 10.1080/23337931.2018.1561188
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Biomater Odontol Scand ISSN: 2333-7931
Figure 1.Design of ceramic rod. The illustration shows the dimensions in mm and a copy of the computer aided design (CAD).
Materials used for cementing.
| Cement | Manufacturer | Adhesive | Manufacturer | Ceramic primer | Manufacturer |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Variolink Esthetic | Ivoclar Vivadent | Adhese | Ivoclar Vivadent | Monobond Plus | Ivoclar Vivadent |
| Multilink Automix | Ivoclar Vivadent | Multilink primer A & B | Ivoclar Vivadent | Monobond Plus | Ivoclar Vivadent |
| Panavia F2.0 | Kuraray Noritake Dental | ED primer 2 A & B | Kuraray Noritake Dental | Clearfil Ceramic Primer Plus, Clearfil SE Bond Primer, Porcelain Bond Activator | Kuraray Noritake Dental |
| Duo-Link | Bisco | All-Bond 2 primer A & B, Pre-Bond Resin, D/E Resin | Bisco | Z-prime Plus, Bis-silane | Bisco |
| RelyX Unicem | 3M | Bis-silane | Bisco |
Figure 2.Experimental design of tensile bond strength test. A metallic jig enclosed the ceramic rod at the notch in the circumference for adequate grip. The rod was cemented onto the dentin surface of bovine tooth embedded in epoxy resin.
Fracture characterization.
| Adhesive | Cohesive | | |||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fracture type | Dentin-cement | Rod-cement | Dentin | Cement | Combination | ||||||||||
| Cement/material | Zir A | Zir E | LDS | Zir A | Zir E | LDS | Zir A | Zir E | LDS | Zir A | Zir E | LDS | Zir A | Zir E | LDS |
| Multilink Automix | 1 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 2 | 7 | 8 | 5 | ||||||
| Variolink Esthetic | 1 | 4 | 3 | 1 | 10 | 2 | 5 | 4 | |||||||
| Panavia F2.0 | 2 | 6 | 9 | 10 | 2 | 1 | |||||||||
| Duo-Link | 10 | 10 | 10 | ||||||||||||
| RelyX Unicem | 5 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 8 | 5 | 6 | 2 | |||||||
The table show number of adhesive, cohesive, and combined fractures for each material and cement. Rods and dentin were studied in light microscope for visualizing fracture morphology. Fractures were classified into 5 different types based on the type for 2/3 of the surface. Fracture was classified as combined if less than 2/3 was of one specific type.
Zir A: air borne particle abraded zirconia; Zir E: KHF2 etched zirconia; LDS: hydrofluorid acid etched lithium disilicate.
Figure 3.Examples of fracture morphology observed in light microscope (diameter 5 mm). 1: combination of cohesive fracture in cement and adhesive fracture between cement-zirconia; 2: combination of cohesive fracture in dentin and adhesive fracture between cement-dentin and cement-zirconia; 3: combination of cohesive fracture in dentin and cement, and adhesive fracture cement-zirconia.
Figure 4.Mean tensile bond strength and standard deviation. Zir A: air borne particle abraded zirconia; Zir E: KHF2 etched zirconia; LDS: hydrofluorid acid etched lithium disilicate. Different lowercase letters illustrate significant difference (p < .05) between Zir A, Zir E, and LDS for each cement. Different uppercase letters illustrate significant differences (p < .05) between cements for each rod material.
Mean surface roughness (Sa) measured in nanometer and statistical comparison between the groups.
| Parameter | Zir A | Zir E | LDS | Zir A/ Zir E | Zir E/LDS | Zir A/LDS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sa | 534–592 | 127–131 | 184–255 |
Zir A: air borne particle abraded zirconia, Zir E: KHF2 etched zirconia, LDS: hydrofluoric acid etched lithium disilicate.
Figure 5.Representative SEM images of air borne particle abraded zirconia (a), KHF2 etched zirconia (b), and hydrofluoric acid etched lithium disilicate (c). Bar represents 20 μm.