Laboratory evaluation of the XR-Bond Dentin/Enamel Bonding System.

J Dent Assoc S Afr

Department of Biomaterials, University of Alabama School of Dentistry, UAB Station, Birmingham 35294, USA.

Published: July 1994

The shear bond strengths of the XR-Bonding System used in conjunction with Herculite composite, to the dentine of forty extracted human permanent first and second molars were determined after the test specimens were stored in physiological saline at 37 degrees C for 48 hours, one week, two weeks and four weeks, respectively. A shear load was applied to the base of the bonded composite cylinders with a knife-edged rod at a crosshead speed of 0.5 mm/minute. The shear bond strengths were expressed in megapascals (MPa). The quantitative microleakage of Class V preparations in dentine (cementum) in forty-eight extracted human maxillary permanent canines restored with the same dentinal bonding system and after storage in physiological saline at 37 degrees C for the same time intervals as for the shear bond strength tests, was determined. On the final day of each time interval the teeth were thermocycled X 500 in a 2 per cent methylene blue solution between 8 degrees C and 50 degrees C with a dwell time of 15 seconds. Microleakage was determined by a spectrophotometric dye-recovery method and expressed in microgram dye/restoration. There was a significant trend for the shear bond strengths to increase with duration of storage (p = 0.01) but the quantitative microleakage was not significantly different (p = 0.75).

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