4.6 Article

EDTA or H3PO4/NaOCl dentine treatments may increase hybrid layers' resistance to degradation: A microtensile bond strength and confocal-micropermeability study

Journal

JOURNAL OF DENTISTRY
Volume 37, Issue 4, Pages 279-288

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jdent.2008.12.002

Keywords

Hybrid layer; Adhesion; Chemical degradation; Etch-and-rinse dental adhesive; NaOCl; EDTA

Funding

  1. CICYT/FEDER [MAT2008-02347/MAT, JA-P07-CTS-2568]

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Objectives: The aim of this study was to reduce hybrid layer degradation created with simplified dentine adhesives by using two different methods to condition the dentine surface. Methods: A smear-layer was created on flat dentine surfaces from extracted human third molars with a 180-grit/SiC-paper. Dentine specimens were conditioned before bonding with the following procedures: 37% H3PO4; H3PO4/0.5% NaOCl; 0.1 M EDTA; 0.1 M EDTA/0.5% NaOCl. Two etch-and-rinse adhesives: (Scotchbond 1XT or Optibond Solo Plus) were applied and light-cured. Composite build-ups were constructed. The bonded teeth were sectioned into beams, stored in distilled water (24 h) or 12% NaOCl solution (90 min) and finally tested for microtensile bond strengths (mu TBS). Additional dentine surfaces were conditioned and bonded as previously described. They were prepared for a pulpal-micropermeability confocal microscopy study and finally observed using confocal microscopy. Results: mu TBS results revealed that both adhesives gave high bond strengths to acid-etched dentine before, but not after a 12% NaOCl challenge. Bonds made to acid-etched or EDTA-treated dentine plus dilute NaOCl, gave high mu TBS that resisted 12% NaOCl treatment, as did EDTA-treated dentine alone. A confocal micropermeability investigation showed very high micropermeability within interfaces of the H3PO4, etched specimens. The lowest micropermeability was observed in H3PO4 + 0.5% NaOCl and 0.1 M EDTA groups. Conclusions: The use of dilute NaOCl (0.5%) after acid-etching, or the conditioning of dentine smear layers with 0.1 M EDTA (pH 7.4) produced less porous resin-dentine interfaces. These dentine-conditioning procedures improve the resistance of the resin-dentine bond sites to chemical degradation (12% NaOCl) and may result in more durable resin-dentine bonds. (C) 2008 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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