AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to evaluate the tensile bond strength (TBS) of Panavia F resin cement used on dentine treated with two different primers at various time intervals (10 min, 24 h, and 12 months).
  • No significant differences in TBS were found at 10 min and 24 h, but both tested groups showed reduced TBS after 12 months, with resin-coated dentin demonstrating the highest bond strength overall.
  • Implementing a self-etching primer and a low-viscosity composite layer before applying resin cement may enhance dentine protection and seal over time.

Article Abstract

Objectives: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the tensile bond strength (TBS) of Panavia F resin cement (PF) applied on dentine pre-treated with ED Primer (ED) and Clearfil Liner Bond 2V (CLB) coated with a layer of low-viscosity composite Protect Liner F (PLF) at 10 min, 24 h and 12 months after curing.

Methods: The labial surfaces of 60 bovine lower incisors were ground to obtain a flat dentine surface, allowing a demarcation of a 4.0 mm-diameter area with adhesive tape. The teeth were randomly divided in six groups; ED was applied in groups A I, A II and A III and CLB was applied, followed by PLF, in groups B I, B II and B III. A resin composite rod with a wire loop was luted directly to the prepared surface of each group with PF. The specimens of groups A I and B I were submitted to TBS test after 10 min. Groups A II and B II were submitted to TBS test after 24 h storage and groups A III and B III were submitted to TBS test after 12 months storage. Each specimen was inspected by SEM and classified according to the failure mode. Additionally, two representative specimens of each failure mode were sectioned for a composite/dentine interface SEM evaluation.

Results: No significant statistical differences were observed among the groups at 10 min and 24 h. Groups A III and B III presented the lowest TBS values (p<0.05) after 12 months storage. PF on resin-coated dentin (PLF) showed the highest TBS values and was statistically different to PF on dentine for all the groups. The fracture pattern was generally cohesive on the adhesive/hybrid layer for groups A I, A II and A III and cohesive on composite resin for B I, B II and B III.

Significance: The use of a less hydrophilic self-etching system to pre-treat dentine, coating with a low-viscosity composite layer prior luting with resin cement, may provide a protection of the hybridised complex, allowing a dentine seal during the 12 months storage period.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jdent.2005.03.002DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

groups iii
16
submitted tbs
12
tbs test
12
tensile bond
8
bond strength
8
resin cement
8
low-viscosity composite
8
groups
8
groups submitted
8
min groups
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!