| Literature DB >> 36159063 |
Safoura Ghodsi1, Mohammad Mostafa Aghamohseni2, Sarah Arzani2, Sasan Rasaeipour3, Mina Shekarian2.
Abstract
Background: To consciously select an appropriate dental cement for each type of intracanal post. Materials andEntities:
Keywords: Dental cement; glass ionomer cements; post-core technics; resin cement; zinc phosphate cement
Year: 2022 PMID: 36159063 PMCID: PMC9490243
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dent Res J (Isfahan) ISSN: 1735-3327
Properties of different types of cement
| Cements | Chemical content | Compressive strength | Tensile strength | Solubility (weight% at 24 h) | Setting time (min) | Modulus of elasticity (GPa) | Bond to tooth | Mikroleakage | Retention | Film thickness |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zinc phosphate | Phosphoric acid liquid + zinc oxide and magnesium oxide powder[ | 62-101 MPa[ | 5-7 MPa[ | 0.2[ | 5-9[ | 13[ | No[ | High[ | Moderate[ | <25[ |
| Zinc polycarboxylate | Polyacrylic acid + zinc oxide and magnesium oxide powder[ | 67-91 MPa[ | 8-12 MPa[ | 0.0619 | 7-9[ | 5-6[ | Moderate chemical[ | High to very high[ | Low to moderate[ | <25[ |
| GI | Aluminosilicates in the powder + polyacrylic acid and tartaric acid[ | 85-126 MPa[ | 6-7 MPa[ | 1[ | 6-8[ | 7-8[ | Chemical[ | Low to very high[ | Moderate to high[ | <25[ |
| Resin-modified GI | Resin and GI[ | 93-226 MPa[ | 13-24 MPa[ | 0.7-0.4[ | 5.5-6[ | 2.5-7.8[ | Chemical[ | Very low[ | Medium[ | >25[ |
| RC | Diluted composite resin + additive adhesive monomers | 179-250 (high[ | High[ | 0.05[ | 4+[ | 4-6[ | Micro-mechanical[ | Very low[ | High[ | <25[ |
GI: Glassionomer; RC: Resin cement
Figure 1Resin cements classification.
Advantages and disadvantages of available dental cements
| Cement | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|
| ZP | Nonexpensive[ | Does not adhere to tooth or post[ |
| Easy to manipulate[ | Brittle[ | |
| Quick to use[ | Soluble in time[ | |
| Relatively no technical sensitivity[ | Vulnerable to microleakage[ | |
| Reliable retention[ | Does not release fluoride[ | |
| Weak enough to remove the post if necessary[ | ||
| Easy clean-up of excess cement[ | ||
| GI | Adhere to dentine[ | Vulnerable to dehydration and elution of calcium and |
| Release fluorid[ | aluminum ions in exposure to excess moisture[ | |
| Nonexpensive[ | Brittle[ | |
| Easy to manipulate[ | Retention of post might be unreliable[ | |
| Low film thickness[ | ||
| Easily cleanable for excess cement[ | ||
| Proper choice for patients with gastric reflux problems or want their teeth to be bleached[ | ||
| Resin-modified GI cements | Increased retention[ | More expensive than ZP or GI cements[ |
| Adherence to metallic posts and root dentin[ | Calls for application of primer or adhesive[ | |
| Fluoride release[ | Difficult or impossible to remove post, if required[ | |
| Easily cleanable for excess cement[ | ||
| Conventional RCs (etch and rinse) | Highest bond strengths to enamel[ | High technique sensitivity[ |
| High bond strengths to dentin[ | Possibility of postoperative sensitivity of tooth[ | |
| Selfadhesive resin cements | Higher bond strengths to dentin[ | Lower bond strength to enamel compared to etch and rinse system[ |
| Easy to use and fewer steps requirement[ | ||
| Low technical sensitivity[ | ||
| Selfetch resin cements | Lower technique sensitivity[ | Lower bond strength[ |
| Fewer steps are required[ | Low rigidity and viscoelasticity[ | |
| No pre-treatment is required[ |
ZP: Zinc phosphate; GI: Glassionomer; RCs: Resin cements
Manufacturers’ recommendations for proper type of cement in each type of post
| Classification of posts | Manufacture of posts | Recommended type of cement |
|---|---|---|
| Metallic prefabricated | ||
| Titanium | A-UCR-330EX(Sweden and martina implantology)[ | Self-etch RC[ |
| ParaPost X Posts(Coltene/Whaledent)[ | Self-adhesive RC[ | |
| Dentatus Classic Surtex®Posts(Dentatus)[ | Self-curing GI cement[ | |
| Stainless steel | Parapost(Coltene/Whaledent)[ | |
| Brass | Dentatus Classic Surtex®Posts(Dentatus)[ | |
| Nonmetallic prefabricated | ||
| Fiber reinforced posts | TENAX®Fiber Trans(Coltene/Whaledent)[ | Self-adhesive RC[ |
| Para post Fiber Lux(Coltene/Whaledent)[ | self-etching RCs[ | |
| Para post Taper Lux(Coltene/Whaledent)[ | Dual-and self-cure RCs[ | |
| RelyX™ Fiber Post(3M ESPE)[ | Light-curing RC[ | |
| EZ-Fit Translucent(Essential dental system)[ | ||
| DT Posts(VDw Dental)[ | ||
| Zirconia | Cosmopost(Vivadent)[ | |
| Snow post(Snow post)[ | ||
| FRC | Marco-lock(RTD dental)[ | |
| Glass-fiber | FibreKor Posts(Pentron)[ | |
| Lucent anchor(Dentatus)[ | ||
| Quartz fiber | Aesthetic-Plus(RTD/Bisco)[ | |
| D.T. Light-Post(RTD/Bisco)[ | ||
| Carbon fiber | C-Post(RTD/Bisco)[ |
GI: Glassionomer; RCs: Resin cements
Characteristics of different type of intracanal posts
| Type | Subcategory | Advantages/indications | Disadvantages/contraindications |
|---|---|---|---|
| Prefabricated posts | Metallic | ||
| Titanium | Preservation of tooth structure[ | Possibility of corrosive or allergic reactions[ | |
| Stainless steel | Same radiodensity as Gutta-Percha[ | ||
| Brass | Low fracture strength(titanium)[ | ||
| Nonmetallic | Contraindicated in thin canal[ | ||
| Esthetic | |||
| Ceramic posts | |||
| Zirconia | Esthetic[ | Weaker than metallic posts[ | |
| High fracture toughness[ | Less conservative of tooth structure[ | ||
| Excellent resistance to corrosion[ | Endanger the core retention[ | ||
| High flexural strength[ | Poor resin-bonding capability[ | ||
| High elastic modulus[ | |||
| Good chemical stability | |||
| Good biocompatibility | |||
| Fiber reinforced posts | |||
| Polyethylene | Decrease possibility of root fracture[ | Very expensive[ | |
| Less microleakage than zirconia and stainless-steel posts[ | |||
| Indicated in teeth with apical resection[ | |||
| High elastic coefficient[ | |||
| High resistance to stretch and distortion[ | |||
| FRC | Reduced risk of toxicity[ | Low physical strength[ | |
| Close modulus of elasticity to dentine[ | |||
| Can be used in esthetic zone[ | |||
| Easy to remove and retreat[ | |||
| Good bonding with tooth structure[ | |||
| Glass-fiber | |||
| Silicate | Better esthetic than quartz fiber posts[ | Esthetically weaker than FRC posts[ | |
| Biocompatibility[ | Low strength[ | ||
| Dentin bonding[ | Debonding[ | ||
| Uncertain clinical performance[ | |||
| Quartz | Easy to use and manipulation[ | Debonding[ | |
| Easy to remove for retreatment[ | Moderate strength[ | ||
| Nonesthetic | |||
| Carbon fiber | Close modulus of elasticity to dentine[ | Should not be used in esthetic zone[ | |
| Reduce the possibility of root fractures[ | |||
| Easy to remove[ | |||
| Reduce the risk of toxicity[ | |||
| High tensile strength[ | |||
| Customize posts | Metallic | ||
| Nonprecious alloy | |||
| Nickel-cobalt | High success rate[ | Contraindicated in high esthetic zone[ | |
| Good choice for misaligned, or small teeth[ | More time and cost[ | ||
| Easy to remove[ | Possibility of allergic reactions[ | ||
| Chrome-cobalt | |||
| NPG color alloy | Cost effect[ | High corrosion reaction[ | |
| High durability[ | Uncertain and insufficient documented evidence | ||
| High thermal strength[ | |||
| Excellent fit[ | |||
| Easy soldering[ | |||
| Biocompatibility[ | |||
| Precious alloy | |||
| Platin-palladium | Highly biocompatible[ | Expensive | |
| Palladium-silver | Suitable for hypersensitive patients[ | ||
| Gold | Repair option[ | ||
| Nonmetallic | |||
| All ceramic | Excellent aesthetics[ | Brittle[ | |
| Excellent biocompatibility[ | Not appropriate for bruxism patients[ | ||
| Low fracture strength and toughness[ | Very rigid[ | ||
| No galvanic corrosion[ | High possibility of root fracture[ | ||
| Good radioopacity[ |
NPG: Nonprecious gold; FRC: Fiber reinforced resin-based composite
Outcome of some studies on different cements retention for post and cores
| Author | Type of post | Compared cements | Conclusion |
|---|---|---|---|
| Habib | Custom cast posts | ZP and self-etch dual RC | ZP had higher retentive values compared to RC |
| Duncan and Pameijer, 1998[ | Parallel titanium posts | RC, ZP, GI, and RMGI | RC provided higher retention than others |
| Chan | Stainless steel paraposts | ZP, ZPC, GI, RC | Stainless steel posts cemented with RC exhibited higher resistance to dislodgement by vertical tensile forces |
| Cohen | Stainless steel posts | RC and ZP | Stainless steel dowels have been shown to be more retentive thancarbon fiber posts when cemented with either RC or ZP cement |
| Lencioni | Pure titanium posts | Self-etch RC, self-adhesive RC, ZP | Posts fixed with self-adhesive RC presented superior bond strength compared to ZP and self-etch cements |
| Ubaldini | Fiber posts | Etch and rinse RC and self-etch adhesive RC | Etch and rinse RC provided higher retention for fiber posts |
| Radke RA, 1988[ | Cast gold posts | ZP, GI, ZPC | ZP and GI cements were found to be more retentive than ZPC |
| Sahmali | Ceramic posts and carbon fiber posts | Self-etch RC, RMGI, GI | Self-etch RC had significantly higher bond strength than two other cements |
| Hagge | Prefabricated post(paraposts) | Self-etch RC, ZP | Self-etch RC demonstrated higher retention than ZP |
| Bonfante | Glass fiber posts | RMGI, dualcure RC | RC provided higher tensile bond strength for glass fiber posts |
| Menani | Cast posts(gold alloypure titanium) | ZP, RC | Both cements provided similar mean tensile retention |
| Cohen | Flexi-post, access post, titanium post | Composite cement, ZP, advance, duet, and GI | Composite cement provided higher retention for all types of posts |
| Sen | Prefabricated posts(ParaPost, Flexi-Post) | Etch and rinse RC, ParaPost Cement, Flexi-Flow Natural, and ZP | Flexi-post showed significantly higher retentive strengths compared to non-threaded posts RC significantly increased the dowel retention compared to ZP |
| Ertugrul and Ismail, 2005[ | Cast metal posts | RC, ZP | ZP cement provided greater tensile bond strength than RC with and without silane coating agent |
ZP: Zinc phosphate; GI: Glassionomer; RC: Resin cement; RMGI: Resin-modified glass ionomer