The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of saliva contamination and the cleaning of the bond surface of titanium base (ti-base) abutments on the bonding stability and retention force values. The bond surface of the ti-base abutments was treated with airborne-particle abrasion. After contamination, the ti-base abutments underwent different cleaning protocols: water spray (HO); alcohol (ALC); suspension of zirconium particles (SZP); reapplied airborne-particle abrasion (APA); and a control condition without contamination and cleaning (CTR). All lithium disilicate crowns were bonded to the ti-base abutments using a primer and a self-curing composite. Bonded specimens underwent thermo-mechanical aging. Bond failure analysis and pull-off testing were performed. Bond failure occurred more frequently in groups HO, ALC, SZP, and APA ( < 0.05). Significant differences in retention force values were only found between CTR and ALC ( < 0.05). Specimens which did not show bond failure after ageing had higher retention force values than the specimens that showed bond failure ( < 0.05). Saliva contamination with cleaning can degrade the bonding properties to titanium. For the retention force values, only the protocol with alcohol after contamination could not restore the values.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8234922PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma14123375DOI Listing

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