AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to determine whether etch-and-rinse or self-etching methods yield better bond strength in bonding to caries-affected dentin in primary and permanent molars.
  • Twenty-four primary and 24 permanent molars were subjected to a 14-day pH cycling process to simulate artificial caries-affected dentin, followed by testing with various adhesive systems.
  • Results indicated that the Scotchbond Universal Adhesive performed similarly to control adhesives in both bonding strategies, demonstrating consistent bond strength regardless of dentin type or application method.

Article Abstract

Purpose: To evaluate whether the etch-and-rinse or self-etching mode of a universal adhesive is the best protocol to optimize bond strength to primary and permanent artificially-induced caries-affected dentin.

Materials And Methods: Flat midcoronal dentin surfaces were exposed in 24 primary and 24 permanent molars and submitted to pH cycling for 14 days to induce artificial caries-affected dentin. For each tooth type (primary and permanent), the teeth were randomly assigned to 4 different groups according to the adhesive systems and bonding strategy: a universal adhesive, Scotchbond Universal Adhesive, in self-etching and etch-and-rinse modes; a twostep etch-and-rinse adhesive, Adper Single Bond 2 (control); and two-step self-etching system, Clearfil SE Bond (control). After bonding and restorative procedures, specimens were sectioned to obtain rectangular sticks (0.8 mm2) that were submitted to microtensile tests (crosshead speed: 1 mm/min). The data were analyzed using two-way ANOVA (α = 0.05).

Results: The universal adhesive showed bond strengths similar to those of the control groups, irrespective of the bonding strategy. Likewise, statistically similar bonding performance was observed for all adhesives to either artificially- induced caries-affected primary or permanent dentin.

Conclusion: The new universal adhesive, Scotchbond Universal Adhesive, can be used in both application modes in artificially-induced caries-affected primary and permanent dentin, as the bond strength was not influenced by the different substrates or application mode.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.3290/j.jad.a36669DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

universal adhesive
28
primary permanent
24
bond strength
12
caries-affected primary
12
adhesive
9
best protocol
8
protocol optimize
8
optimize bond
8
induced caries-affected
8
artificially-induced caries-affected
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!