comparison of shear bond strength of rmgi and composite resin for orthodontic bracket bonding.

Authors

soghra yassaei associate professor, department of orthodontic dentistry, member of social determinants of oral health research center, dental school, shahid sadoughi university of medical sciences, yazd, iran.

abdolrahim davari associate professor, department of operative dentistry, member of social determinants of oral health research center, dental school, shahid sadoughi university of medical sciences, yazd, iran.

mahjobeh goldani moghadam post graduate student, department of orthodontic dentistry, school of dentistry, shahid sadoughi university of medical sciences, yazd, iran.

ahmad kamaei dentist.

abstract

the aim of this study was to compare the shear bond strength (sbs) of resin modified glass ionomer (rmgi) and composite resin for bonding metal and ceramic brackets.eighty-eight human premolars extracted for orthodontic purposes were divided into 4 groups (n=22). in groups 1 and 2, 22 metal and ceramic brackets were bonded using composite resin (transbond xt), respectively. twenty-two metal and ceramic brackets in groups 3 and 4, respectively were bonded using rmgi (fuji ortho lc, japan). after photo polymerization, the teeth were stored in water and thermocycled (500 cycles between 5° and 55°). the sbs value of each sample was determined using a universal testing machine. the amount of residual adhesive remaining on each tooth was evaluated under a stereomicroscope. statistical analyses were done using two-way anova.rmgi bonded brackets had significantly lower sbs value compared to composite resin bonded groups. no statistically significant difference was observed between metal and ceramic brackets bonded with either the rmgi or composite resin. the comparison of the adhesive remnant index (ari) scores between the groups indicated that the bracket failure mode was significantly different among groups (p<0.001) with more adhesive remaining on the teeth bonded with composite resin.rmgis have significantly lower sbs compared to composite resin for orthodontic bonding purposes; however the provided sbs is still within the clinically acceptable range.

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Journal title:
journal of dentistry, tehran university of medical sciences

جلد ۱۱، شماره ۳، صفحات ۲۸۲-۹

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