AI Article Synopsis

  • - This study evaluated the exitance irradiance and power of four commercial dental light-curing units using various radiometers, including handheld analog, handheld digital, and laboratory instruments.
  • - The analysis revealed that while laboratory instruments offered consistent irradiance values, handheld radiometers (especially analog) often measured lower values, except in some comparisons with the Elipar S10 model.
  • - Power measurements indicated that the Bluephase II radiometer consistently recorded the lowest values compared to laboratory instruments, suggesting a significant disparity in measurements between handheld and lab-based devices.

Article Abstract

This study measured and compared exitance irradiance and power of 4 commercial dental light-curing units (LCU) (Elipar S10, Elipar DeepCure-S, Corded VALO and Bluephase Style) using different types of radiometers. The devices used to analyze the LCU were classified as either handheld analog (Henry Schein, Spring, Demetron 100A, Demetron 100B and Demetron 200), handheld digital (Bluephase 1, Bluephase II, Coltolux, CureRite and Hilux), or laboratory instruments (Thermopile and Integrating Sphere). The laboratory instruments and the Bluephase II radiometer were also used to measure the LCU's power (mW). The LCU's were activated for 20 s (n=5). Data were analyzed using Kruskal-Wallis and Student-Newman-Keuls multiple comparison test (a=0.05). Among the LCU, the laboratory instruments presented different irradiance values, except for Corded VALO. The Coltolux and Hilux radiometers measured greater irradiance values compared to the laboratory instruments for the four LCUs tested. Within a given LCU, handheld analog units measured lower irradiance values, compared to handheld digital and laboratory instruments, except using the Spring radiometer for the Elipar S10 LCU. None of the handheld radiometers were able to measure similar irradiance values compared to laboratory instruments, except for Elipar S10 when comparing Bluephase 1 and Thermopile. Regarding power measurement, Bluephase II always presented the lowest values compared to the laboratory instruments. These findings suggest that the handheld radiometers utilized by practitioners (analog or digital) exhibit a wide range of irradiance values and may show lower outcomes compared to laboratory based instruments.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/0103-6440201902430DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

laboratory instruments
28
irradiance values
20
values compared
16
compared laboratory
16
elipar s10
12
laboratory
9
irradiance power
8
light-curing units
8
units measured
8
corded valo
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!