Evaluating the advancements in a recently introduced universal adhesive compared to its predecessor
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Alam, Arefin; Yamauti, Monica; Almas Chowdhury, Abu Faem Mohammad; Wang, Xiaohong; Lloret, Pedro A´lvarez; Zuñiga Heredia, Enrique Ezra; Cifuentes Jiménez, Carolina Cecilia; Dua, Rupak; Iijima, Masahiro; Sano, HidehikoEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Adhesive Bond strength Dentin
Fecha
2023-12-19Referencia bibliográfica
Alam, A. et. al. 19 (2024) 1609e1619. [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jds.2023.12.004]
Patrocinador
JST Spring (grant number JPMJSP2119); Ministerio de Ciencia de Innovacio´n (MCINN) (Ministry of Science and Innovation, Spain) project PGC2018-102047-BI00/ PCI2019-111931-2 (MCIU/AEI/FEDER/UE); the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) - Next Generation/EU program; American Dental Association Science and Research InstituteResumen
Background/purpose: The dental adhesive market is constantly evolving to meet
the demands of dentists and patients, but new products and upgrades should be rigorously
evaluated before being used in clinical practice. This study investigated the physicomechanical
properties and dentin bonding efficacy of a newly upgraded universal adhesive compared to
its predecessor.
Materials and methods: Twenty-four molars were divided into four groups (nZ6/group) based
on adhesive (new vs. predecessor) and application mode [self-etch (SE) vs. etch-and-rinse
(ER)] for evaluating their dentin microtensile bond strength (mTBS), failure pattern, and
bonding interface. Additional thirty-six molars’ crowns were perpendicularly sectioned to
obtain flat mid-coronal dentin discs. The opposing dentin surfaces of each disc received contrasting
treatments (new/predecessor adhesive applied in SE/ER mode), resulting in six interventions. The bonded discs (n Z 6/intervention) were used to assess the adhesives’ survival
probability employing a double-sided mTBS test. The other physicomechanical properties
examined were adhesives’ oxygen inhibition layer (OIL), viscosity, hardness, elastic modulus,
degree of conversion (DC), and in-situ DC.
Results: Both adhesive versions showed similar mTBS (P > 0.05), failure pattern (P > 0.05), and
survival probability (P > 0.008). ER mode promoted resin tag formation and exhibited a slender
adhesive layer for both adhesives. The newer adhesive version showed a thinner adhesive layer
in general with narrower OIL (P < 0.001), less viscosity (P < 0.001), higher hardness (P < 0.05),
elastic modulus (P < 0.05), DC (P < 0.001), and in-situ DC (P < 0.001).
Conclusion: While the newly updated adhesive had superior physicomechanical properties
with more fluidity, its dentin bonding efficacy and survival probability were comparable to
its predecessor.