Title of article :
Tensile bond strength of PMMA- and composite-based CAD/CAM materials to luting cements after different conditioning methods
Author/Authors :
Keul، نويسنده , , Christine Saint-Martin، نويسنده , , Anna and Wimmer، نويسنده , , Timea and Roos، نويسنده , , Malgorzata and Gernet، نويسنده , , Wolfgang and Stawarczyk، نويسنده , , Bogna، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Pages :
6
From page :
122
To page :
127
Abstract :
This study investigated whether the adhesion of novel generation of polymeric CAD/CAM resins to luting cements would improve after use of different conditioning methods, and to evaluate the failure types after debonding. Two CAD/CAM resins (PMMA- and composite-based) were obtained (N=600, n=15 per test group). The specimens were conditioned as follows: MH: Monobond Plus/Heliobond, VL: Visio.link, AM: Ambarino P60, VP: VP connect, CG: no conditioning as control group, and luted with conventional (Variolink II) or self-adhesive luting cement (Clearfil SA Cement). Two types of storage were performed: after 24 h water storage (37 °C) and additional 5000 thermal cycles (5 °C/55 °C). Tensile bond strength (TBS) was measured and data were analysed using 4/1-way ANOVA (Scheffé test), independent two-sample t-test and Chi2 test (alpha=0.05). For both CAD/CAM resins, no or lower bonding was observed for the non-conditioned or AM groups, regardless of the luting cement. The conditioning with MH, VL and VP showed significant increase of TBS. In general, bonding on exp. CAD/CAM composite presented significant higher values compared to PMMA-based artBloc Temp. Variolink II showed higher TBS in combination with artBloc Temp. After conditioning with MH and VL predominantly cohesive failures in the luting cement were observed. All other groups showed adhesive failure. Aging level did not affect the TBS. The bonding properties of the CAD/CAM resin materials are dependent of the targeted selection of the conditioning method and luting cement. Composite-based materials showed higher bonding properties to luting cements than PMMA-based.
Keywords :
CAD/CAM resin , Tensile bond strength , Resin cements , Conditioning methods , Bonding , Luting , Adhesive systems
Journal title :
International Journal of Adhesion and Adhesives
Serial Year :
2013
Journal title :
International Journal of Adhesion and Adhesives
Record number :
1700331
Link To Document :
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