Influence of Chlorhexidine and/or Ethanol Treatment on Bond Strength of an Etch-and-rinse Adhesive to Dentin: An In Vitro and In Situ Study
Author(s) -
DMS Simões,
Roberta Tarkany Basting,
FLB Amaral,
CP Turssi,
Fabiana Mantovani Gomes França
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
operative dentistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.965
H-Index - 81
eISSN - 1559-2863
pISSN - 0361-7734
DOI - 10.2341/12-486-l
Subject(s) - chlorhexidine , bond strength , dentin , molar , dentistry , adhesive , in situ , materials science , ethanol , dental bonding , chemistry , composite material , medicine , organic chemistry , layer (electronics)
SUMMARY The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of a chlorhexidine and/or ethanol application on the bond strength of an etch-and-rinse, hydrophobic adhesive system either under in vitro aging or in situ cariogenic challenge. The dentin surface of 36 human third molars were flattened and allocated into four groups to be treated with chlorhexidine, ethanol, or chlorhexidine + ethanol or left unexposed to any solution (control) (n=9). Then, a resin composite restoration was made on the dentin surface and longitudinal sticks were obtained. Sticks from each tooth were assigned to three test conditions: stored in water in vitro for 24 hours, stored in water in vitro for 6 months, or worn in situ for 14 days. During in situ wear time, a high-cariogenic challenge condition was simulated. Specimens were tested for microtensile bond strength (μTBS). Multivariate analysis of variance and Tukey's test showed that chlorhexidine, ethanol, or chlorhexidine + ethanol did not affect the μTBS. The in vitro μTBS values were significantly lower for the specimens stored for 6 months than for those stored for 24 hours. Intermediate μTBS values were shown by the specimens worn in situ. Thus, use of chlorhexidine and/or ethanol was incapable of containing the degradation at the bond interface in the in vitro model. The in situ model was capable of reducing bond strength similarly to the in vitro/6 months model. Despite this, the in situ bond strength was still similar to that of the in vitro/24-hour model.
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