6533b861fe1ef96bd12c43c0

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Sealing capacity of a photochromatic flowable composite as protective base in nonvital dental bleaching.

José AmengualCarmen LlenaLeopoldo Forner

subject

Dye penetrationDental LeakageTooth NonvitalAnalysis of VarianceMaterials scienceDye leakagebusiness.industryDentistryDental Marginal AdaptationComposite ResinsStatistics NonparametricSilver nitratechemistry.chemical_compoundstomatognathic systemchemistryAcid Etching DentalFlowable CompositeTooth BleachingPulp (tooth)HumansAdhesiveTetric FlowbusinessGeneral DentistryLeakage (electronics)

description

Aim  To evaluate microleakage of a flowable composite used as a protective isolating base, applied with different adhesive systems. Methodology  Seventy root-filled teeth were divided into seven groups. A flowable composite base (Tetric Flow Chroma) was used with three adhesive techniques (Syntac, Excite, Excite DCS; in the three cases with and without acid etching) and in a control group without dentine conditioning or adhesive placement. A 30% hydrogen peroxide solution was applied for 24 h in the pulp chambers, followed by the placement of a dye (silver nitrate) for 4 h. Each tooth was sectioned longitudinally, and examined under 4× magnification to assess the tooth/restoration dye leakage following a four-degree scale. Percentage of dye penetration was registered. Statistical analysis was made through the Tukey and Mann–Whitney U-tests. Results  Maximum leakage (100% of specimens) was recorded in the control group without an adhesive system. In the groups subjected to acid etching, the percentage of leakage corresponded to Excite DSC (10%), followed by Syntac (20%) and Excite (30%). In the groups in which only an adhesive system was used, 50% of the teeth demonstrated dye leakage. Statistically significant differences in terms of leakage were observed between the control group and the experimental groups (P < 0.05). There were no significant differences among the experimental groups, but comparing the leakage percentages obtained between the groups in which the teeth were subjected to prior acid etching, and those in which no etching was carried out, observed differences were significant (P = 0.04). Conclusions  There were no significant differences between the adhesive systems in terms of leakage. Acid etching significantly reduced leakage.

10.1111/j.1365-2591.2006.01072.xhttps://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16507071