4.7 Article

Chlorhexidine preserves dentin bond in vitro

Journal

JOURNAL OF DENTAL RESEARCH
Volume 86, Issue 1, Pages 90-94

Publisher

INT AMER ASSOC DENTAL RESEARCHI A D R/A A D R
DOI: 10.1177/154405910708600115

Keywords

matrix metalloproteinase; hybrid layer; tooth; microtensile; adhesive

Funding

  1. NIDCR NIH HHS [R01 DE014911-01A1, R01 DE015306, R01 DE 015306, R01 DE 014911, R01 DE014911] Funding Source: Medline

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Loss of hybrid layer integrity compromises resin-dentin bond stability. Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) may be partially responsible for hybrid layer degradation. Since chlorhexidine inhibits MMPs, we hypothesized that chlorhexidine would decelerate the loss of resin-dentin bonds. Class I preparations in extracted third molars were sectioned into two halves. One half was customarily restored (etch-and-rinse adhesive/resin composite), and the other was treated with 2% chlorhexidine after being acid-etched before restoration. Specimens were stored in artificial saliva with/without protease inhibitors. Microtensile bond strengths and failure mode distribution under SEM were analyzed immediately after specimens' preparation and 6 months later. With chlorhexidine, significantly better preservation of bond strength was observed after 6 months; protease inhibitors in the storage medium had no effect. Failure analysis showed significantly less failure in the hybrid layer with chlorhexidine, compared with controls after 6 months. In conclusion, this in vitro study suggests that chlorhexidine might be useful for the preservation of dentin bond strength.

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