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. 2020;22(1):99-105.
doi: 10.3290/j.jad.a43996.

Enamel and Dentin Bond Durability of Self-Adhesive Restorative Materials

Enamel and Dentin Bond Durability of Self-Adhesive Restorative Materials

Mark A Latta et al. J Adhes Dent. 2020.

Abstract

Purpose: To use shear bond strength (SBS) and shear fatigue strength (SFS) testing to determine the durability of adhesion of self-adhesive restorative materials compared to composite resin bonded with a universal adhesive.

Materials and methods: A universal adhesive, Prime & Bond Active, was used in self-etch mode to bond Z-100 composite resin to enamel and dentin. Three commercially available restorative materials and one experimental material with self-adhesive properties, Activa (A), Fuji II LC(F), and Equia Forte (E) and ASAR-MP4 (S) were also bonded to enamel and dentin. The SBS and SFS were determined for all materials. A staircase method was used to determine the SFS with 10 Hz frequency for 50,000 cycles or until failure occurred.

Results: On enamel, S generated similar values to the adhesive/composite materials and higher values than F, E, and A. On dentin, the composite/universal adhesive showed significantly higher SBS and SFS than the self-adhesive materials. S, F, and E generated higher values than A on dentin.

Conclusion: SBS and SFS values to enamel were similar for all materials tested except Activa which generated lower enamel values. On dentin surfaces, the self-adhesive materials generated similar SBS and SFS, with the exception of Activa. Those values were lower than that generated with composite resin and a universal adhesive.

Keywords: adhesion to dental hard tissues; bond durability; fatigue testing; glass ionomers; self-adhesive restoratives.

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