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Acidity of conventional luting cements and their diffusion through bovine dentine
Author(s) -
Hiraishi N.,
Kitasako Y.,
Nikaido T.,
Foxton R. M.,
Tagami J.,
Nomura S.
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
international endodontic journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.988
H-Index - 119
eISSN - 1365-2591
pISSN - 0143-2885
DOI - 10.1046/j.1365-2591.2003.00700.x
Subject(s) - glass ionomer cement , zinc phosphate , zinc , cement , dental cement , materials science , dentistry , luting agent , dentinal tubule , phosphate , dentin , diffusion , nuclear chemistry , chemistry , composite material , adhesive , layer (electronics) , bond strength , metallurgy , medicine , physics , organic chemistry , thermodynamics
Aim  To examine the changes in pH of luting cements and acid diffusion of luting cements through bovine dentine using a pH‐imaging microscope (SCHEM‐100; Horiba Ltd, Kyoto, Japan). Methodology  The pH of the surface of three conventional luting cements, glass‐ionomer, zinc phosphate and zinc polycarboxylate was measured with SCHEM‐100 for 1 month. The acid diffusion from the three luting cements through bovine dentine was investigated by measuring pH changes during the application of each luting cement on the bovine dentine surface. Coronal bovine dentine disks were prepared to thicknesses of 0.50 and 0.25 mm. Each luting cement was placed on the labial dentine surface, and the pH change of the pulpal surface was observed every 3 min for 30 min with SCHEM‐100. Results  Glass‐ionomer showed the lowest pH values for longer times. Neutralization proceeded furthest in zinc polycarboxylate. The 0.5‐mm‐thick dentine disks showed no pH change on the pulpal side with all the three cements. The 0.25‐mm‐thick disks revealed evidence of acid diffusion on the pulpal side of the cemented dentine and significantly lower pH when cemented with glass‐ionomer and zinc phosphate than with zinc polycarboxylates. Conclusions  This study demonstrated that glass‐ionomer exhibited a lower setting pH than zinc phosphate and zinc polycarboxylate, and acid diffusions from glass‐ionomer and zinc phosphate cements were observed when placed on 0.25‐mm‐thick dentine disks.

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