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Oper Dent ; 29(6): 705-12, 2004.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15646228

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate a total-etch three-step adhesive system's resin-dentin interfacial ultrastructure and microtensile dentin bond strength (microTBS) after multi-year storage in water. METHODS: Resin composite crowns were formed on 600 grit SiC flattened extracted human molars using a total-etch three-step adhesive system (Optibond FL, Kerr) and a hybrid resin composite (Prodigy, Kerr). microTBS specimens were fabricated and placed in water with 0.5% chloramine T at 37 degrees C until respective static load to failure testing at one-month, six-months and five-year storage. Failure modes were determined by scanning electron microscopy. The interfacial ultrastructure of the resin-dentin interface was analyzed by transmission electron microscopy (TEM) at 48-hours and 44-months storage. microTBS was modeled with Weibull distribution for survival analysis and failure curve distributions were analyzed by the Wald chi-square statistic for significant differences at alpha=0.05. RESULTS: The characteristic tensile strength (sigma omicron) at one-month, six-months and five-year storage was 52.63, 14.77 and 23.57 Mpa, with a Weibull modulus of 3.04, 1.56 and 1.28, respectively. Failure distributions for all groups were significantly different (p<0.0001) with one-month > five-year > six-months. TEM interfacial morphology demonstrated hydrolytic degradation of hybrid layer components at 44-months storage. SIGNIFICANCE: The decrease in tensile strength and changes in ultrastructure may be caused by water sorption and resultant hydrolytic degradation of the adhesive joint.


Subject(s)
Composite Resins/chemistry , Dental Bonding , Dentin-Bonding Agents/chemistry , Dentin/ultrastructure , Water/chemistry , Absorption , Acid Etching, Dental , Adsorption , Crowns , Humans , Hydrolysis , Materials Testing , Microscopy, Electron, Scanning , Microscopy, Electron, Transmission , Resin Cements/chemistry , Stress, Mechanical , Surface Properties , Survival Analysis , Tensile Strength , Time Factors
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