effect of three light curing protocols and load cycling on microleakage of class v composite restorations
Authors
abstract
objective: different methods have been suggested to overcome the polymerization shrinkage of composite restorations. changing the light curing protocol to improve polymerization by using new light curing units is among these methods. the new devices are more efficient, portable and durable and produce less heat. this study aimed to assess the marginal microleakage of class v composite restorations subjected to three different light curing protocols and mechanical cycles. methods: this was an in-vitro experimental study. class v cavities measuring 2x3x1.5 mm were prepared on the buccal and lingual surfaces of 90 extracted human premolar teeth 1.5 mm above and below the cement enamel junction (cej). the samples were selected using convenience sampling and divided into 9 experimental groups of 10 each by using the table of random numbers to control for the bias. the cavities were restored with packable composite resin along with tetric-n-bond and cured using three light curing protocols of conventional (680 mw/cm2 for 30s), soft-start (380 mw/cm2 for 10s followed by 680 mw/cm2 for 20s) and pulse (680 mw/cm2 for 30s,1s interval and 1s of lighting). the teeth were then subjected to mechanical cycles of 0, 500,000 and 1,000,000 and immersed in 2% fuchsin for 24h. the teeth were then sectioned in half from the middle of the restoration buccolingually and the degree of microleakage was evaluated under a stereomicroscope ( zeiss, germany ) with 40x magnification. data were analyzed using the kruskal wallis and the mann-whitney tests. results: despite the structural differences between the enamel and dentin margins, no significant difference was found in the degree of microleakage between the enamel (occlusal wall, p>0.05) and dentin (gingival wall, p>0.05) margins among the understudy groups. conclusion: the degree of marginal microleakage in soft-start (ss) polymerization was not significantly different from that in conventional and pulse polymerizations of class v composite restorations.
similar resources
Effect of Three Light Curing Protocols and Load Cycling on Microleakage of Class V Composite Restorations
Objective: Different methods have been suggested to overcome the polymerization shrinkage of composite restorations. Changing the light curing protocol to improve polymerization by using new light curing units is among these methods. The new devices are more efficient, portable and durable and produce less heat. This study aimed to assess the marginal microleakage of class V composite restora...
full textThe effect of three different curing methods on the microleakage of cl V posterior composite restorations
The effect of three different curing methods on the microleakage of cl V posterior composite restorations Dr. N. Mohammadi* - Dr. P. Alizadeh Oskoee* - Dr. S. Savadi Oskoee*- Dr. A . Soleyman zadeh** *- Assistant Professor of Esthetic & Operative Dentistry Dept. - Faculty of Dentistry – Tabriz University of Medical Sciences.*- Dentist. Background and Aim: Light-cured composites have become almo...
full textEffect of C-factor and LED Curing Mode on Microleakage of Class V Resin Composite Restorations
OBJECTIVES To investigate the effects of cavity C-factor and LED curing mode on microleakage of class V resin composite restorations. METHODS Eighty extracted human maxillary premolars were divided into four groups. In groups I and II, V-shaped class V cavities (C-factor ≈ 1.5) were prepared while box-shaped class V cavities (high C-factor ≈ 4) were prepared in groups III and IV. All the cavi...
full textIn Vitro Microleakage of Class V Composite Restorations in Use of Three Adhesive Systems
Background and Aim: Microleakage is a drawback of composite restorations and it is more noticeable in dentinal walls. Despite advances in dentin bonding agents, no adhesive can completely eliminate microleakage and provide a hermetic seal. This study aimed to compare microleakage of three resin bonding agents namely a universal adhesive, two-step self-etch system and two-step total-etch system....
full textEffect of mechanical load cycling on class V glass- ionomer and composite restorations; a microleakage and scanning electron microscopic evaluation
Received: 9 June 2011 Accepted: 29 August 2011 Abstract Background and Aim: Microleakage is an important problem with direct restorations and familiarity with its contributing factors is of utmost importance. The aim of this study was scanning electron microscopic evaluation of marginal integrity in three types of class V tooth-colored restorations and the effect of load cycling on their microl...
full textEffect of light-curing unit and adhesive system on marginal adaptation of class v composite restorations.
The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of light-curing units (LED or halogen) on the marginal adaptation of composite restorations performed with etch-and-rinse and self-etching adhesive. Class V cavities were prepared on bovine teeth with the gingival margin on dentin and the incisal margin on enamel. The cavities were restored with a micro-hybrid resin composite using an etch-and-ri...
full textMy Resources
Save resource for easier access later
Journal title:
journal of dental school, shahid beheshti university of medical sciencesجلد ۳۲، شماره ۲، صفحات ۷۱-۷۹
Keywords
Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com
copyright © 2015-2023