| Literature DB >> 33417063 |
S Garoushi1, S Sungur2, Y Boz2, P Ozkan2, P K Vallittu3,4, S Uctasli2, L Lassila3.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: The aim was to examine the influence of short-fiber composite (SFC) core on the fracture-behavior of different types of indirect posterior restorations. In addition, the effect of thickness ratio of SFC-core to the thickness of the veneering conventional composite (PFC) on fracture-behavior of bi-structured composite restorations was evaluated.Entities:
Keywords: Bi-structure restoration; CAD/CAM; Overlays; Short-fiber composite
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33417063 PMCID: PMC8310497 DOI: 10.1007/s00784-020-03768-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Oral Investig ISSN: 1432-6981 Impact factor: 3.573
The restorative materials used in the study
| Material (code) | Manufacturer | Composition |
|---|---|---|
| G-aenial Anterior (PFC) | GC Corp, Tokyo, Japan | UDMA, dimethacrylate co-monomers, prepolymerized silica, and strontium fluoride containing fillers 76 wt% |
| Cerasmart 270 | GC Corp, Tokyo, Japan | Bis-MEPP, UDMA, DMA, Silica (20 nm), barium glass (300 nm) 71 wt% |
| e-max CAD | IvoclarVivadent AG, Liechtenstein | Lithium disilicate glass ceramic |
everX Flow (SFC) Bulk shade | GC Corp, Tokyo, Japan | Bis-EMA, TEGDMA, UDMA, short glass fiber (200–300 μm and Ø7 μm), barium glass 70 wt% |
TEGDMA, triethylene glycol dimethacrylate; UDMA, urethane dimethacrylate; Bis-MEPP, bis (p-methacryloxy (ethoxy)1-2 phenyl)-propane; Bis-EMA, ethoxylated bisphenol-A-dimethacrylate; wt%, weight percentage
Fig. 1A photograph and schematic drawing representing tooth preparation measurements in millimeters, bi-structured restoration, and the compression load test setup
Fig. 2Mean fracture load values (N) and standard deviations (SD) of tested composite restorations with different SFC-core thicknesses. The same letters inside the bars represent non-statistically significant differences (p > 0.05) among the materials
Fig. 3Mean values of load-bearing capacity (N) and standard deviation (SD) of tested restorations (single/bi-structure). The same letters inside the bars represent non-statistically significant differences (p > 0.05) among the materials
Fig. 4Percentage and photographs of various fracture patterns of the composite restorations with different SFC-core thicknesses
Fig. 5Percentage of various fracture patterns of tested single-structure and bi-structure restorations
Fig. 6SEM photomicrographs with different magnifications of fracture surfaces of investigated bi-structure restorations showing a radial cracks (a and b, arrow) propagated from the load application area to the interface at SFC-core. c Delamination of veneering material from SFC-core. d Interface between veneering material and SFC-core