Publications by authors named "Ferracane J"

Background: Dental pulp regeneration is a complex and advancing field that requires biomaterials capable of supporting the pulp's diverse functions, including immune defense, sensory perception, vascularization, and reparative dentinogenesis. Regeneration involves orchestrating the formation of soft connective tissues, neurons, blood vessels, and mineralized structures, necessitating materials with tailored biological and mechanical properties. Numerous biomaterials have entered clinical practice, while others are being developed for tissue engineering applications.

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Objectives: To evaluate the color-match with extracted natural teeth of three single-shade universal composites, a group-shade universal composite, and a highly translucent-shade conventional composite.

Methods: Twenty extracted human teeth were divided into light- and dark-shade groups (n = 10, LSG and DSG). A preparation was restored with the 3 single-shade universal composites, OMNICHROMA (OMC), Admira Fusion x-tra U (AFU), and Essentia U (ESU); a highly translucent-shade conventional composite, Tetric EvoCeram T (TEC-T); and two shades of a group-shade universal composite-Filtek Universal Restorative (FUR A1 and A4).

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This review article will discuss the origin of resin-based dental composite materials and their adoption as potentially useful adjuncts to the primary material used by most dentists for direct restorations. The evolution of the materials, largely driven by the industry's response to the needs of dentists, has produced materials that are esthetic, strong, and versatile enough to be used in most areas of the oral cavity to replace or restore missing tooth structures. Significant advancements, such as the transition from chemical to light-curing materials, refinements in reinforcing particles to produce optimum polishing and wear resistance, formulating pastes with altered viscosities to create highly flowable and highly stiff materials, and creating materials with enhanced depth of cure to facilitate placement, will be highlighted.

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Introduction: The physical condition of the tip and the irradiance of LCUs used in dental offices in the United States and Canada was assessed twice.

Methods: The tip irradiance and physical condition of the tip of 1067 LCUs from 544 dental clinics were assessed twice between 2015 and 2021 using the CheckMARC (BlueLight) radiometer. The irradiance values were compared by paired Student's t-test (α = 0.

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During endovascular interventions, coaxial deployment of stents may be required to preserve luminal gain. This study characterized in vitro the effect on crush resistance and postcompression recovery when 316L stainless steel balloon-expandable (BE) and laser-cut nitinol self-expanding (SE) venous stents were deployed coaxially. Various stent configurations were parallel-plate compressed from a fully expanded state to 50% diameter reduction (Criterion, Model 42; MTS, Eden Prairie, Minnesota) in a 37 °C ± 1 water bath.

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Objective: This study aimed to isolate the relationship between filler size and the surface properties of roughness and gloss before and after toothbrush abrasion for experimental resin-based composites (RBCs) containing uniform spherical fillers.

Materials And Methods: Five experimental light-cured RBCs with different spherical filler sizes and three commercial RBCs were studied. Forty specimens were polished using silicon carbide papers.

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Article Synopsis
  • A detailed study examines how two thiol quantification chromophores, Ellman's reagent and Aldrithiol-4, behave in nonaqueous solvents, highlighting their kinetic profiles and response factors.
  • The research demonstrates the effectiveness of various benchtop methods at room temperature, showcasing how organic solvents present different advantages compared to traditional aqueous conditions.
  • The analysis includes validation of these methods and successfully quantifies cysteine levels in ovalbumin, emphasizing the applicability of thiol-disulfide exchange chromophores in nonaqueous environments for thiol measurement.
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Background: This article reviews the most salient lessons learned from a large, multisite, 3-year observational study of posterior teeth with cracks conducted by The National Dental Practice-Based Research Network.

Types Of Studies Reviewed: Eight articles published over a 6-year period (2017-2022) describing clinical characteristics of posterior teeth with cracks and their treatment and outcomes are reviewed and discussed to answer 3 common questions faced by oral health care clinicians: Which cracked teeth will get worse? When should practitioners intervene? What is the best treatment?

Results: Although cracks in teeth are prevalent, few will fracture (3%) or show crack progression in 3 years (12%). Characteristics that guide the clinician to treatment include active caries, biting pain, and to a lesser degree, having a crack detectable with an explorer, connecting with a restoration, or blocking transilluminated light; the main treatment chosen is a complete crown.

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Biofilms are complex three-dimensional microbial communities that adhere to a variety of surfaces and interact with their surroundings. Because of the dynamic nature of biofilm formation, establishing a uniform technique for quantifying and monitoring biofilm volume, shape, and features in real-time is challenging. Herein, we describe a noninvasive electrochemical impedance approach for real-time monitoring of dental plaque-derived multispecies biofilm growth on a range of substrates.

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Article Synopsis
  • Research on dental self-healing polymers has surged, focusing on enhancing the lifespan of dental restorations through innovative microcapsule strategies.
  • The study explores the incorporation of N,N-Dimethylacrylamide (DMAM) into healing agents, stressing the need to tailor microcapsule shells to accommodate core properties.
  • Results show that adding DMAM improves toughness by 50% and significantly increases the energy needed for crack propagation, indicating a more durable polymer network.
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  • A new risk of bias tool, RoBDEMAT, has been developed specifically for pre-clinical dental materials research to enhance reporting and assessment in systematic reviews.
  • The development process involved a four-stage method including project initiation, literature review, and expert consensus through a Delphi process, gathering input from 26 stakeholders and reviewing recent systematic reviews on dental materials.
  • RoBDEMAT consists of nine items across four domains related to different types of bias, with accompanying guides and signalling questions, aiming to improve the quality of dental materials research and its systematic evaluations.
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Objectives: To develop a 3D-printed, microparticulate hydrogel supplemented with dentin matrix molecules (DMM) as a novel regenerative strategy for dental pulp capping.

Materials And Methods: Gelatin methacryloyl microgels (7% w/v) mixed with varying concentrations of DMM were printed using a digital light projection 3D printer and lyophilized for 2 days. The release profile of the DMM-loaded microgels was measured using a bicinchoninic acid assay.

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Objectives: This study: 1) measures the effect of sample thickness and high irradiance on the depth-dependent time delay before photopolymerization reaction onset; 2) determines if exposure reciprocity exists; 3) measures the conversion rate at four irradiance levels; 4) determines the time, t, at which the maximum DC rate is reached for two bulk-fill and one conventional posterior resin-based composites (RBCs).

Methods: Tetric PowerFill IVA shade (Ivoclar Vivadent) and Aura bulk-fill ultra universal restorative (SDI), and one conventional posterior resin-based composite (RBC), Heliomolar A3 (Ivoclar Vivadent), that were either 0.2 mm, 2 mm, or 4 mm thick were photocured using a modified Bluephase G4 (Ivoclar Vivadent) light-curing unit (LCU) that delivered a single emission band (wavelength centered at 449 nm).

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Dental caries is a biofilm-mediated, diet-modulated, multifactorial and dynamic disease that affects more than 90% of adults in Western countries. The current treatment for decayed tissue is based on using materials to replace the lost enamel or dentin. More than 500 million dental restorations are placed annually worldwide, and materials used for these purposes either directly or indirectly interact with dentin and pulp tissues.

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Bacterial-mediated local pH change plays an important role in altering the integrity of resin dental composite materials in a dynamic environment such as the oral cavity. To address this, we developed a 300-μm-diameter, flexible, solid-state potentiometric pH microsensor capable of detecting and quantifying the local pH microenvironment at the interface of multispecies biofilm and dental resin in real time over 10 days. We used fluorinated poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene) as the back contact in our newly developed pH sensor, along with a PVC-based ion-selective membrane and PTFE-AF coating.

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Statement Of Problem: During the trial placement of zirconia restorations, contamination of the bonding surface is inevitable. Although cleaning methods for contaminated surfaces have been described, a method of preventing saliva contamination of the bonding surface of zirconia restorations is lacking.

Purpose: The purpose of this in vitro study was to investigate an ethyl cellulose coating as an evaluation agent to mitigate the effects of saliva contamination on the bond strength of zirconia restorations.

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Objective: Cracked teeth may be associated with pain, especially biting pain, and to a lesser degree cold and spontaneous pain.  Described are how commonly these pains remain constant, develop, or resolve over time, none of which have been well-described, especially among untreated cracked teeth.

Methods: Cracked teeth from the Cracked Tooth Registry (CTR) study were followed for 3 years.

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This study characterized the impact of vein wall biomechanics on inflow diameter and luminal flow during venous angioplasty and stent placement, using postthrombotic and healthy biomechanical properties from an ovine venous stenosis and thrombosis model. Finite element analysis demonstrated more pronounced inflow channel narrowing in the postthrombotic vein compared with the healthy control vein during angioplasty and stent placement (relative inflow diameter reduction of 42% versus 13%, P < .0001).

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Objective: To describe the effect of the composites' composition to produce high surface smoothness/gloss using finishers/polishers, and to assess maintained smoothness/gloss under toothbrush abrasion.

Materials And Methods: PubMed papers published from January 01, 2000 to September 01, 2021 were included, and keywords used were: filler particle size, shape, amount of dental composites; finishing/polishing, gloss/roughness, and toothbrush abrasion of composites. Seventy-five in-vitro studies were included in this literature review.

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In this study, an acrylamide-based adhesive was combined with a thiourethane-based composite to improve bond stability and reduce polymerization stress, respectively, of simulated composite restorations. The stability testing was conducted under physiologic conditions, combining mechanical and bacterial challenges. Urethane dimethacrylate was combined with a newly synthesized triacrylamide (TMAAEA) or HEMA (2-hydroxyethyl-methacrylate; control) to produce a 2-step total-etch adhesive system.

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Purpose: To characterize an ovine endovascular radiofrequency (RF) ablation-based venous stenosis and thrombosis model for studying venous biomechanics and response to intervention.

Materials And Methods: Unilateral short-segment (n = 2) or long-segment (n = 6) iliac vein stenoses were created in 8 adult sheep using an endovenous RF ablation technique. Angiographic assessment was performed at baseline, immediately after venous stenosis creation, and after 2-week (n = 6) or 3-month (n = 2) survival.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study aimed to analyze the treatment and monitoring outcomes of cracked posterior teeth over three years, involving 2,858 patients treated by 209 dentists across the USA.
  • Results showed a high survival rate of over 98% for cracked teeth, with a low failure rate (14%) for those that were treated restoratively.
  • The study concluded that dentists can successfully assess whether cracked teeth should receive treatment or simply be monitored, with around 80% continuing to be monitored without requiring additional treatment during the study period.
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