DENTIN PERMEABILITY - SEALING THE DENTIN IN CROWN PREPARATIONS

Provisional restorations of full crown preparations may permit more microleakage of bacteria and their products than the final castings do. However, most investigations of the sealing qualities of cemented castings have reported that they too permit dye leakage. One approach to the problem is to sea...

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Veröffentlicht in:Operative dentistry 1992-01, Vol.17 (1), p.13-20
Hauptverfasser: PASHLEY, EL, COMER, RW, SIMPSON, MD, HORNER, JA, PASHLEY, DH, CAUGHMAN, WF
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Provisional restorations of full crown preparations may permit more microleakage of bacteria and their products than the final castings do. However, most investigations of the sealing qualities of cemented castings have reported that they too permit dye leakage. One approach to the problem is to seal the dentin with dentin bonding agents at the completion of the crown preparation. This study evaluated the ability of six different dentin bonding agents to seal the dentin of crown preparations of human teeth in vitro using two independent techniques. The first technique quantitated fluid filtration across dentin before and after treatment with dentin bonding agents at one hour, one day, one week, and one month and after thermocycling. The second method measured silver nitrate penetration of the thin veneers of dentin bonding agents into the dentin. Both methods correlated well with each other. The best seals were obtained with Prisma Universal Bond 2 or Superbond powder plus liquid. The worst seals were found using Gluma and Superbond liquid only. Clearfil PhotoBond, Amalgambond, and Scotchbond 2 gave intermediate results. Although the dentin bonding agents tend to accumulate on chamfers, thereby increasing their thickness to 200-300-mu-m, the method looks promising as a simple way to protect the pulp from the consequences of microleakage.
ISSN:0361-7734