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Effect of mold enclosure and chisel design on fatigue bond strength of dental adhesive systems
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Effect of mold enclosure and chisel design on fatigue bond strength of dental adhesive systems

Wayne W Barkmeier, Akimasa Tsujimoto, Mark A Latta, Toshiki Takamizawa, Scott M Radniecki and Franklin Garcia-Godoy
European journal of oral sciences, Vol.130(3), pp.e12864-e12864
04/22/2022
DOI: 10.1111/eos.12864
PMCID: PMC9321680
PMID: 35452147
url
https://doi.org/10.1111/eos.12864View
Published (Version of record)CC BY V4.0 Open Access

Abstract

To examine the effect of mold enclosure and chisel design on macro shear fatigue bond strengths of dental adhesive systems. The fatigue bond strength testing was conducted with two commercially available dental adhesive systems, (1) OptiBond eXTRa and (2) Scotchbond Universal, for bonding a resin composite (Filtek Supreme Ultra) to both enamel and dentin using a mold enclosure and a non-mold enclosure with a knife-edge and two sized notched-edge chisel assemblies for loading. As a loading reference for the fatigue testing, macro shear bond strengths of the adhesive systems to enamel and dentin were conducted using a mold enclosure and a knife-edge chisel assembly. The shear bond strengths with the mold enclosure using knife-edge chisel assembly did not exhibit a significant difference between the adhesive systems for either enamel or dentin. The fatigue bond strengths of bonded specimens demonstrated significant differences when comparing the mold enclosure and non-mold enclosure, but not between knife-edge and notched-edge chisel assemblies. The fatigue bond strengths of dental adhesive systems demonstrated significantly higher values when using mold-enclosed bonded specimens than a non-mold enclosure, regardless of type of chisel assembly.
Dentistry, Oral Surgery & Medicine Life Sciences & Biomedicine Science & Technology UIOWA OA Agreement

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