Repair bond strength of bulk-fill composites: influence of different primers and direction of debonding stress

AbstractBackground The purpose of this in vitro study was to evaluate the effect of different adhesion primers on the repair bond strength of bulk-fill resin composite and short-term hydrolytic stability of the repair interface before and after accelerated aging. In addition, direction of debonding...

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Main Authors: Pekka Ahlholm, Frode Staxrud, Kirsi Sipilä, Pekka Vallittu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2023-12-01
Series:Biomaterial Investigations in Dentistry
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/26415275.2023.2258924
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author Pekka Ahlholm
Frode Staxrud
Kirsi Sipilä
Pekka Vallittu
author_facet Pekka Ahlholm
Frode Staxrud
Kirsi Sipilä
Pekka Vallittu
author_sort Pekka Ahlholm
collection DOAJ
description AbstractBackground The purpose of this in vitro study was to evaluate the effect of different adhesion primers on the repair bond strength of bulk-fill resin composite and short-term hydrolytic stability of the repair interface before and after accelerated aging. In addition, direction of debonding stress was examined.Materials and methods Bulk-fill substrates were aged in water for 14 days at 37 °C. Smooth resin composite surfaces were prepared for the substrates with a superfine grinding paper (FEPA #500, #1200, #2000). Test specimens were produced by attaching bulk-fill composite to the substrate surfaces, using three different primer/bonding systems. Specimens were aged 24 h at 37 °C in water, or thermal cycled (5–55 °C/5,000 cycles). Subsequently, shear bond strength and micro-tensile bond strength were evaluated. In total there were 60 specimens for the shear bond strength and 60 specimens for the micro-tensile bond strength measurements (30 stored in water 24 h, 30 thermal cycled, n = 10 in each primer/bonding mode).Results The mean shear bond strength was 9.1–13.1 MPa after 24 h water storage and 6.9–10.7 MPa after thermal cycling. The mean micro-tensile bond strength was 28.7–45.8 MPa after 24 h water storage and 22.7–37.9 MPa after thermal cycling.Conclusion The Ceramic primer (silane containing) seems to perform better than the three-step etch and rinse adhesive or the Composite primer. Shear-type stress had an adverse effect on the repair bond strength of bulk-fill resin composites.
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spelling doaj.art-64c6010606a74f69a46b13227da793072023-12-31T04:16:02ZengTaylor & Francis GroupBiomaterial Investigations in Dentistry2641-52752023-12-0110110.1080/26415275.2023.2258924Repair bond strength of bulk-fill composites: influence of different primers and direction of debonding stressPekka Ahlholm0Frode Staxrud1Kirsi Sipilä2Pekka Vallittu3Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Diseases, Helsinki University Hospital, Helsinki, FinlandNordic Institute of Dental Materials, NIOM, Oslo, NorwayResearch Unit of Oral Health Sciences, University of Oulu, Oulu, FinlandDepartment of Biomaterials Science and Turku Clinical Biomaterials Centre, TCBC Institute of Dentistry, University of Turku, FinlandAbstractBackground The purpose of this in vitro study was to evaluate the effect of different adhesion primers on the repair bond strength of bulk-fill resin composite and short-term hydrolytic stability of the repair interface before and after accelerated aging. In addition, direction of debonding stress was examined.Materials and methods Bulk-fill substrates were aged in water for 14 days at 37 °C. Smooth resin composite surfaces were prepared for the substrates with a superfine grinding paper (FEPA #500, #1200, #2000). Test specimens were produced by attaching bulk-fill composite to the substrate surfaces, using three different primer/bonding systems. Specimens were aged 24 h at 37 °C in water, or thermal cycled (5–55 °C/5,000 cycles). Subsequently, shear bond strength and micro-tensile bond strength were evaluated. In total there were 60 specimens for the shear bond strength and 60 specimens for the micro-tensile bond strength measurements (30 stored in water 24 h, 30 thermal cycled, n = 10 in each primer/bonding mode).Results The mean shear bond strength was 9.1–13.1 MPa after 24 h water storage and 6.9–10.7 MPa after thermal cycling. The mean micro-tensile bond strength was 28.7–45.8 MPa after 24 h water storage and 22.7–37.9 MPa after thermal cycling.Conclusion The Ceramic primer (silane containing) seems to perform better than the three-step etch and rinse adhesive or the Composite primer. Shear-type stress had an adverse effect on the repair bond strength of bulk-fill resin composites.https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/26415275.2023.2258924Bondingbulk-fillshear bond strengthmicro-tensile bond strength
spellingShingle Pekka Ahlholm
Frode Staxrud
Kirsi Sipilä
Pekka Vallittu
Repair bond strength of bulk-fill composites: influence of different primers and direction of debonding stress
Biomaterial Investigations in Dentistry
Bonding
bulk-fill
shear bond strength
micro-tensile bond strength
title Repair bond strength of bulk-fill composites: influence of different primers and direction of debonding stress
title_full Repair bond strength of bulk-fill composites: influence of different primers and direction of debonding stress
title_fullStr Repair bond strength of bulk-fill composites: influence of different primers and direction of debonding stress
title_full_unstemmed Repair bond strength of bulk-fill composites: influence of different primers and direction of debonding stress
title_short Repair bond strength of bulk-fill composites: influence of different primers and direction of debonding stress
title_sort repair bond strength of bulk fill composites influence of different primers and direction of debonding stress
topic Bonding
bulk-fill
shear bond strength
micro-tensile bond strength
url https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/26415275.2023.2258924
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AT frodestaxrud repairbondstrengthofbulkfillcompositesinfluenceofdifferentprimersanddirectionofdebondingstress
AT kirsisipila repairbondstrengthofbulkfillcompositesinfluenceofdifferentprimersanddirectionofdebondingstress
AT pekkavallittu repairbondstrengthofbulkfillcompositesinfluenceofdifferentprimersanddirectionofdebondingstress