1. Resin adhesion to caries-affected dentine after different removal methods.
- Author
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Sattabanasuk, V., Burrow, M. F., Shimada, Y., and Tagami, J.
- Subjects
DENTAL adhesives ,TREATMENT of dental caries ,DENTAL caries ,SILICON carbide ,DENTAL caries research ,PATIENTS ,ANALYSIS of variance ,CHI-squared test ,COMPARATIVE studies ,DENTAL cements ,DENTIN ,DENTISTRY ,MEDICAL lasers ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,NONPARAMETRIC statistics ,RESEARCH ,EVALUATION research ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,ACYCLIC acids - Abstract
Background: Caries-affected dentine is the common bonding substrate when treating a patient. At present, there are many methods used for caries removal. The aim of this study was to evaluate the microtensile bond strength of two adhesives (Clearfil Protect Bond and OptiBond Solo Plus Total-Etch) to caries-affected dentine after three different caries removal methods.Methods: Extracted carious human third molars were used and caries-affected dentine surfaces were obtained from one of the three removal methods: (i) round steel bur in a slow-speed handpiece; (ii) Er:YAG laser; or (iii) 600-grit silicon carbide abrasive paper. Each of the adhesives was used to bond resin composite to the caries-affected dentine according to the manufacturers' instructions. Hourglass-shaped specimens were prepared and stressed in tension at 1mm/min. Data were analysed using two-way analysis of variance and least significant difference test.Results: Clearfil Protect Bond showed significantly lower bond strength than OptiBond Solo Plus Total-Etch after caries removal with round steel bur, but the opposite was found for specimens treated with silicon carbide abrasive paper. For laser-treated dentine, no significant differences between the adhesives were revealed.Conclusions: Besides the differences in adhesives, different caries removal methods seem to influence resin adhesion to caries-affected dentine. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2006
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