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Effect of intermediate agents and pre-heating of repairing resin on composite-repair bonds

Authorized Users Only
2007
Authors
Papacchini, Federica
Magni, Elisa
Radović, I.
Mazzitelli, Claudia
Monticelli, Francesca
Goracci, Cecilia
Polimeni, Antonella
Ferrari, Marco
Article (Published version)
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Abstract
This study investigated the composite-to-composite microtensile bond strength and interfacial quality after using different combinations of intermediate agents and pre-curing temperatures of repairing resin. Forty-five composite discs (8x4mm) of Gradia Direct Anterior (GC Corp), stored in a saline solution at 37 degrees C for one month, were sandblasted (50 pm aluminum oxide), cleaned (35% phosphoric acid) and randomly divided into three groups (n=15) according to the intermediate agent applied: 1) no treatment; 2) unfilled resin (Scotchbond Multi-Purpose Adhesive, 3M ESPE); 3) flowable composite (Gradia LoFlo, GC Corp). Each disc was incrementally repaired (8x8 mm) with the same resin as the substrate. For each group, three subgroups (n=5) were created, depending on the pre-curing temperature of the repairing resin-4 degrees C, 23 degrees C or 37 degrees C. Two bonded specimens per group were prepared to evaluate the composite-to-composite interfacial quality via scanning electron mic...roscope. Microtensile bond strength measurements were performed with the remaining three specimens and failure mode was examined by stereomicroscopy. Two-way ANOVA revealed that temperature (p lt 0.001), intermediate agent (p lt 0.001) and the interaction (p=0.002) significantly affected the repair strength. Post-hoc comparisons revealed that bond strengths were significantly lower using a 4 degrees C repairing resin in groups where intermediate agents were used. The highest bond strengths were recorded when flowable composite was used as an intermediate agent under each of the three temperature conditions. Interfacial quality improved by raising the resin temperature from 4 degrees C to 37 degrees C.

Source:
Operative Dentistry, 2007, 32, 4, 363-371
Publisher:
  • Operative Dentistry Inc, Indianapolis

DOI: 10.2341/06-105

ISSN: 0361-7734

PubMed: 17695609

WoS: 000247985300008

Scopus: 2-s2.0-34547426298
[ Google Scholar ]
38
34
URI
https://smile.stomf.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1325
Collections
  • Radovi istraživača
Institution/Community
Stomatološki fakultet
TY  - JOUR
AU  - Papacchini, Federica
AU  - Magni, Elisa
AU  - Radović, I.
AU  - Mazzitelli, Claudia
AU  - Monticelli, Francesca
AU  - Goracci, Cecilia
AU  - Polimeni, Antonella
AU  - Ferrari, Marco
PY  - 2007
UR  - https://smile.stomf.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1325
AB  - This study investigated the composite-to-composite microtensile bond strength and interfacial quality after using different combinations of intermediate agents and pre-curing temperatures of repairing resin. Forty-five composite discs (8x4mm) of Gradia Direct Anterior (GC Corp), stored in a saline solution at 37 degrees C for one month, were sandblasted (50 pm aluminum oxide), cleaned (35% phosphoric acid) and randomly divided into three groups (n=15) according to the intermediate agent applied: 1) no treatment; 2) unfilled resin (Scotchbond Multi-Purpose Adhesive, 3M ESPE); 3) flowable composite (Gradia LoFlo, GC Corp). Each disc was incrementally repaired (8x8 mm) with the same resin as the substrate. For each group, three subgroups (n=5) were created, depending on the pre-curing temperature of the repairing resin-4 degrees C, 23 degrees C or 37 degrees C. Two bonded specimens per group were prepared to evaluate the composite-to-composite interfacial quality via scanning electron microscope. Microtensile bond strength measurements were performed with the remaining three specimens and failure mode was examined by stereomicroscopy. Two-way ANOVA revealed that temperature (p  lt  0.001), intermediate agent (p  lt  0.001) and the interaction (p=0.002) significantly affected the repair strength. Post-hoc comparisons revealed that bond strengths were significantly lower using a 4 degrees C repairing resin in groups where intermediate agents were used. The highest bond strengths were recorded when flowable composite was used as an intermediate agent under each of the three temperature conditions. Interfacial quality improved by raising the resin temperature from 4 degrees C to 37 degrees C.
PB  - Operative Dentistry Inc, Indianapolis
T2  - Operative Dentistry
T1  - Effect of intermediate agents and pre-heating of repairing resin on composite-repair bonds
VL  - 32
IS  - 4
SP  - 363
EP  - 371
DO  - 10.2341/06-105
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Papacchini, Federica and Magni, Elisa and Radović, I. and Mazzitelli, Claudia and Monticelli, Francesca and Goracci, Cecilia and Polimeni, Antonella and Ferrari, Marco",
year = "2007",
abstract = "This study investigated the composite-to-composite microtensile bond strength and interfacial quality after using different combinations of intermediate agents and pre-curing temperatures of repairing resin. Forty-five composite discs (8x4mm) of Gradia Direct Anterior (GC Corp), stored in a saline solution at 37 degrees C for one month, were sandblasted (50 pm aluminum oxide), cleaned (35% phosphoric acid) and randomly divided into three groups (n=15) according to the intermediate agent applied: 1) no treatment; 2) unfilled resin (Scotchbond Multi-Purpose Adhesive, 3M ESPE); 3) flowable composite (Gradia LoFlo, GC Corp). Each disc was incrementally repaired (8x8 mm) with the same resin as the substrate. For each group, three subgroups (n=5) were created, depending on the pre-curing temperature of the repairing resin-4 degrees C, 23 degrees C or 37 degrees C. Two bonded specimens per group were prepared to evaluate the composite-to-composite interfacial quality via scanning electron microscope. Microtensile bond strength measurements were performed with the remaining three specimens and failure mode was examined by stereomicroscopy. Two-way ANOVA revealed that temperature (p  lt  0.001), intermediate agent (p  lt  0.001) and the interaction (p=0.002) significantly affected the repair strength. Post-hoc comparisons revealed that bond strengths were significantly lower using a 4 degrees C repairing resin in groups where intermediate agents were used. The highest bond strengths were recorded when flowable composite was used as an intermediate agent under each of the three temperature conditions. Interfacial quality improved by raising the resin temperature from 4 degrees C to 37 degrees C.",
publisher = "Operative Dentistry Inc, Indianapolis",
journal = "Operative Dentistry",
title = "Effect of intermediate agents and pre-heating of repairing resin on composite-repair bonds",
volume = "32",
number = "4",
pages = "363-371",
doi = "10.2341/06-105"
}
Papacchini, F., Magni, E., Radović, I., Mazzitelli, C., Monticelli, F., Goracci, C., Polimeni, A.,& Ferrari, M.. (2007). Effect of intermediate agents and pre-heating of repairing resin on composite-repair bonds. in Operative Dentistry
Operative Dentistry Inc, Indianapolis., 32(4), 363-371.
https://doi.org/10.2341/06-105
Papacchini F, Magni E, Radović I, Mazzitelli C, Monticelli F, Goracci C, Polimeni A, Ferrari M. Effect of intermediate agents and pre-heating of repairing resin on composite-repair bonds. in Operative Dentistry. 2007;32(4):363-371.
doi:10.2341/06-105 .
Papacchini, Federica, Magni, Elisa, Radović, I., Mazzitelli, Claudia, Monticelli, Francesca, Goracci, Cecilia, Polimeni, Antonella, Ferrari, Marco, "Effect of intermediate agents and pre-heating of repairing resin on composite-repair bonds" in Operative Dentistry, 32, no. 4 (2007):363-371,
https://doi.org/10.2341/06-105 . .

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