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An In-Vitro Evaluation of Microleakage in Resin-Based Restorative Materials at Different Time Intervals

A vital feature of conservative dentistry is the adhesion of the restorative material to the tooth structure for restoration of the tooth substance lost due to dental decay, trauma, or dental imperfections. In a perfect world, a restorative material should generate a lasting adhesion by bonding the...

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Autores principales: Bilgrami, Afreen, Alam, Mohammad Khursheed, Qazi, Fazal ur Rehman, Maqsood, Afsheen, Basha, Sakeenabi, Ahmed, Naseer, Syed, Kausar Ali, Mustafa, Mohammed, Shrivastava, Deepti, Nagarajappa, Anil Kumar, Srivastava, Kumar Chandan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8838729/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35160456
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym14030466
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author Bilgrami, Afreen
Alam, Mohammad Khursheed
Qazi, Fazal ur Rehman
Maqsood, Afsheen
Basha, Sakeenabi
Ahmed, Naseer
Syed, Kausar Ali
Mustafa, Mohammed
Shrivastava, Deepti
Nagarajappa, Anil Kumar
Srivastava, Kumar Chandan
author_facet Bilgrami, Afreen
Alam, Mohammad Khursheed
Qazi, Fazal ur Rehman
Maqsood, Afsheen
Basha, Sakeenabi
Ahmed, Naseer
Syed, Kausar Ali
Mustafa, Mohammed
Shrivastava, Deepti
Nagarajappa, Anil Kumar
Srivastava, Kumar Chandan
author_sort Bilgrami, Afreen
collection PubMed
description A vital feature of conservative dentistry is the adhesion of the restorative material to the tooth structure for restoration of the tooth substance lost due to dental decay, trauma, or dental imperfections. In a perfect world, a restorative material should generate a lasting adhesion by bonding the restoration with tooth tissues. The ingress of micro-organisms, oral fluids, molecules, and ions through microscopic spaces due to faulty adhesion between restoration and tooth structure is known as microleakage. This study is focuses on the evaluation of adhesive failures between the restorative materials. In the past, studies have focused more on the bonding potential of a restorative material with the tooth surface. Therefore, there is need to carry out a study that compares the microleakage between resin-based restorative materials in a sandwich manner with and without the intermediate bonding layer after immersion in 2% methylene blue dye at different time intervals. The restorative materials used were composite Ceram X Mono plus (DENTSPLY) and Z350 (3M ESPE), Vitremer resin modified glass ionomer cement (RMGIC) (3M ESPE), smart dentine replacement SDR (3M ESPE), Bond NT (DENTSPLY), and Universal Bond (3M ESPE). A light emitting diode (LED) was used to cure the specimens. Artificial saliva was used as a storage medium for the specimens. Thermocycling of specimens was carried out at 500 cycles/30 s and 1000 cycles/30 s. The world health organization (WHO) grading tool for microleakage was used to analyze fluid ingress in the specimens through disclosing by 2% methylene blue dye. The statistical analysis was carried out with one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) and Tukey post hoc test, keeping the level of significance at p ≤ 0.05. In Grade 0 = 85 samples, Grade 1 = 10 samples, Grade 2 = 7 samples, Grade 3 = 16 samples, and in Grade 4 = 2 samples were identified. This study describes that no microleakage was observed in SDR and resin composite groups as compared to Vitremer and resin composite groups.
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spelling pubmed-88387292022-02-13 An In-Vitro Evaluation of Microleakage in Resin-Based Restorative Materials at Different Time Intervals Bilgrami, Afreen Alam, Mohammad Khursheed Qazi, Fazal ur Rehman Maqsood, Afsheen Basha, Sakeenabi Ahmed, Naseer Syed, Kausar Ali Mustafa, Mohammed Shrivastava, Deepti Nagarajappa, Anil Kumar Srivastava, Kumar Chandan Polymers (Basel) Article A vital feature of conservative dentistry is the adhesion of the restorative material to the tooth structure for restoration of the tooth substance lost due to dental decay, trauma, or dental imperfections. In a perfect world, a restorative material should generate a lasting adhesion by bonding the restoration with tooth tissues. The ingress of micro-organisms, oral fluids, molecules, and ions through microscopic spaces due to faulty adhesion between restoration and tooth structure is known as microleakage. This study is focuses on the evaluation of adhesive failures between the restorative materials. In the past, studies have focused more on the bonding potential of a restorative material with the tooth surface. Therefore, there is need to carry out a study that compares the microleakage between resin-based restorative materials in a sandwich manner with and without the intermediate bonding layer after immersion in 2% methylene blue dye at different time intervals. The restorative materials used were composite Ceram X Mono plus (DENTSPLY) and Z350 (3M ESPE), Vitremer resin modified glass ionomer cement (RMGIC) (3M ESPE), smart dentine replacement SDR (3M ESPE), Bond NT (DENTSPLY), and Universal Bond (3M ESPE). A light emitting diode (LED) was used to cure the specimens. Artificial saliva was used as a storage medium for the specimens. Thermocycling of specimens was carried out at 500 cycles/30 s and 1000 cycles/30 s. The world health organization (WHO) grading tool for microleakage was used to analyze fluid ingress in the specimens through disclosing by 2% methylene blue dye. The statistical analysis was carried out with one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) and Tukey post hoc test, keeping the level of significance at p ≤ 0.05. In Grade 0 = 85 samples, Grade 1 = 10 samples, Grade 2 = 7 samples, Grade 3 = 16 samples, and in Grade 4 = 2 samples were identified. This study describes that no microleakage was observed in SDR and resin composite groups as compared to Vitremer and resin composite groups. MDPI 2022-01-24 /pmc/articles/PMC8838729/ /pubmed/35160456 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym14030466 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Bilgrami, Afreen
Alam, Mohammad Khursheed
Qazi, Fazal ur Rehman
Maqsood, Afsheen
Basha, Sakeenabi
Ahmed, Naseer
Syed, Kausar Ali
Mustafa, Mohammed
Shrivastava, Deepti
Nagarajappa, Anil Kumar
Srivastava, Kumar Chandan
An In-Vitro Evaluation of Microleakage in Resin-Based Restorative Materials at Different Time Intervals
title An In-Vitro Evaluation of Microleakage in Resin-Based Restorative Materials at Different Time Intervals
title_full An In-Vitro Evaluation of Microleakage in Resin-Based Restorative Materials at Different Time Intervals
title_fullStr An In-Vitro Evaluation of Microleakage in Resin-Based Restorative Materials at Different Time Intervals
title_full_unstemmed An In-Vitro Evaluation of Microleakage in Resin-Based Restorative Materials at Different Time Intervals
title_short An In-Vitro Evaluation of Microleakage in Resin-Based Restorative Materials at Different Time Intervals
title_sort in-vitro evaluation of microleakage in resin-based restorative materials at different time intervals
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8838729/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35160456
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym14030466
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