1. Effects of blood and root-dentin cleaning on the porosity and bond strength of a collagen bioceramic material.
- Author
-
Saltareli FM, Castro-Raucci LMS, Miranda CES, Tavella-Silva NC, Oliveira IR, and Raucci-Neto W
- Subjects
- Porosity, Cattle, Animals, Tooth Root chemistry, Silicates chemistry, Calcium Compounds chemistry, Dental Bonding methods, Aluminum Compounds chemistry, Ceramics chemistry, Materials Testing, Biocompatible Materials chemistry, Oxides chemistry, Root Canal Filling Materials chemistry, Drug Combinations, Sodium Hypochlorite chemistry, Dentin drug effects, Collagen chemistry, Blood
- Abstract
To assess the effect of cleaning protocols on dentin contaminated with blood in reparative endodontic materials, bovine root samples were divided: no contamination (N); contamination (P); contamination and cleaning with saline (S), 2.5% NaOCl+saline (Na) or 2.5% NaOCl+17% EDTA+saline (NaE) and filled with: mineral trioxide aggregate (MTA), calcium-aluminate-cement (C), or C+collagen (Ccol) (n=13). The samples were evaluated for porosity, chemical composition, and bond strength. MTA porosity was lower than C (p=0.02) and higher than Ccol (p<0.001). P and NaE were similar (p=1.00), but higher than the other groups (p<0.001). MTA bond strength was similar to Ccol (p=0.777) and lower than C (p=0.028). P presented lower bond strength than the N (p<0.001); S and Na were similar to each other (p=0.969), but higher than P and lower than N (p<0.001). It was observed a predominance of mixed and cohesive failures. None of the samples showed Ca/P ratio values similar to human hydroxyapatite. This study showed that contamination with blood increased the materials porosity, but dentin cleaning with 2.5% NaOCl reduced this effect, and the collagen additive reduced the material porosity. Furthermore, blood contamination reduced the materials bond strength, and cleaning with saline or 2.5% NaOCl diminished this effect.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF