marginal adaptation of indirect composite, glass-ceramic inlays and direct composite: an in vitro evaluation
Authors
abstract
objective: this experimental in vitro study compared marginal adaptation of indirect composite, glass-ceramic inlays and direct composite. materials and methods: seventy-five recently extracted human molars were randomly divided into three groups (n=25) and mesio-occluso-distal cavities with the same dimensions were prepared in the teeth. indirect composite and glass-ceramic inlays were fabricated following manufacturer's instructions and the marginal gap was measured by a stereomicroscope at magnification 40× before cementation. after cementation of inlays and restoring the third group by direct composite, all the specimens were thermocycled and the marginal gaps were measured exactly as previously described. repeated measure anova and post-hoc tukey test were used for pairwise comparison of occlusal, proximal, and gingival marginal gaps in each group. one-way anova and post-hoc tukey test were used for comparison of mean marginal gap in the three groups and for comparison of marginal gap before and after cementation in inlays, paired t-test was used. results: the marginal gap of direct composite (19.96 μm) was significantly lower than that of indirect composite inlay (48.47 μm), which in itself was significantly lower than that of glass-ceramic inlay (60.96 μm). in all the restorations, marginal gap in the gingival margin was significantly higher than occlusal and proximal margins. the marginal gap of inlays did not change after cementation and thermocycling. conclusion: this study indicated that the marginal gaps of the evaluated restorations are less than 100 μm, which is clinically acceptable.
similar resources
Marginal Adaptation of Indirect Composite, Glass-Ceramic Inlays and Direct Composite: An In Vitro Evaluation
OBJECTIVE This experimental in vitro study compared marginal adaptation of indirect composite, glass-ceramic inlays and direct composite. MATERIALS AND METHODS Seventy-five recently extracted human molars were randomly divided into three groups (n=25) and mesio-occluso-distal cavities with the same dimensions were prepared in the teeth. Indirect composite and glass-ceramic inlays were fabrica...
full textCeramic Inlays versus Composite Inlays
Acid etching and filled acrylic materials have been generating great interest in the past few years because of increased public demand for esthetic restorations and alternatives to amalgam. Composite resin and ceramic inlays, which use adhesive bonding, were introduced to make possible toothcolored restorations. The physical properties of composite resin restorations, and their poor wear resist...
full textInternal and Marginal Fit of Modern Indirect Class II Composite Inlays
Introduction: This in vitro study investigates the marginal and internal fit of indirect class II composite restorations. Two different processes for chair-side restorations were compared. In group A, the restorations were fabricated using CAD/CAM technology (Cerec, Sirona, Germany, Bernsheim) and in group B they were made by hand (GrandioSO Inlay System, VOCO GmbH, Germany, Cuxhaven). Methods:...
full textEvaluation of internal adaptation in ceramic and composite resin inlays by silicon replica technique.
This study was aimed at investigating the internal adaptation of a ceramic (Ceramco II) and two composite resin inlay materials (SureFil and 3M Filtek Z 250) using silicon replica technique as an indicator. Forty-five standard mesial-occlusal-distal (MOD) cavities were prepared into brass moulds by using computer numerically controlled system. Inlays were prepared according to manufacturers' in...
full textThree-year clinical performance of two indirect composite inlays compared to direct composite restorations
OBJECTIVE Despite the incremental build-up of resin composite restorations, their polymerization shrinkage during curing presents a serious problem. Indirect composite resin systems represent an alternative in overcoming some of the deficiencies of direct composite restorations. The hypothesis of the present study states that the clinical performance of restorations may be affected by different...
full textDirect resin composite restorations versus indirect composite inlays: one-year results.
AIM The aim of this study was to evaluate the clinical performance of direct resin composite restorations (Tetric Ceram-TC) and indirect composite inlays (Targis-TG) after 12 months. METHODS AND MATERIALS Seventy-six Class I and II restorations (44 direct and 32 indirect) were inserted in premolars and molars with carious lesions or deficient restorations in 30 healthy patients according to t...
full textMy Resources
Save resource for easier access later
Journal title:
journal of dentistry, tehran university of medical sciencesجلد ۷، شماره ۲، صفحات ۷۷-۸۳
Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com
copyright © 2015-2023