Title of article
Effect of Ascorbic Acid on Shear Bond Strength of Orthodontic Brackets Bonded with Resin-modified Glass-ionomer Cement to Bleached Teeth
Author/Authors
Khosravanifard, Behnam Department of Orthodontics - Dental Branch - Islamic Azad University, Tehran , Parhiz, Hadi Department of Orthodontics - Dental Branch - Islamic Azad University, Tehran , Rakhshan, Vahid Department of Dental Anatomy and Morphology - Dental Branch - Islamic Azad University, Tehran , Araghi, Solmaz Department of Endodontics - School of Dentistry - Qazvin University of Medical Sciences, Qazvin
Pages
11
From page
59
To page
69
Abstract
Background and aims. Bleaching can considerably reduce shear bond strength (SBS) of orthodontic brackets bonded with composite adhesives. Application of antioxidants is a method to reverse the negative effect of bleaching on composite-to-enamel bond. However, the efficacy of antioxidants in increasing the SBS of brackets bonded using resin-modified glass-ionomer cement (RMGIC) has not been studied, which was the aim of this study.
Materials and methods. Fifty freshly extracted human maxillary first premolars were bleached with 35% hydrogen peroxide (Pola Office Bleaching, SDI). Sodium ascorbate 10% was applied to the experimental specimens (n=25). All the specimens were etched with 37% phosphoric acid (Ivoclar/Vivadent) and bonded using RMGIC (Fuji Ortho LC, GC). The specimens were subjected to incubation (37°C, 24h) and thermocycling (1000 cycles, 5-55°C, dwell time = 1 min). The SBS was measured at 0.5 mm/min debonding crosshead speed. The adhesive remnant index (ARI) was scored under ×10 magni-fication. Data were analyzed using Mann-Whitney U test, one- and independent-samples t-test, and Fisher’sexact test (α=0.05).
Results. The mean SBS of experimental and control groups were 11.97 ± 4.49 and 7.7 ± 3.19 MPa, respectively. The dif-ference was statistically significant (P=0.000 by t-test). SBS of both control (P=0.014) and experimental (P=0.000) groups were significantly higher than the minimum acceptable SBS of 6 MPa, according to one-sample t-test.
Conclusion. Application of ascorbic acid can guarantee a strong bond when RMGIC is to be used. However, RMGIC might tolerate the negative effect of bleaching with minimum SA treatments (or perhaps without treatments), which de-serves further studies.
Keywords
shear bond strength (SBS) , resin-modified glass-ionomer , tooth bleaching , orthodontic brackets , Ascorbic acid
Journal title
Astroparticle Physics
Serial Year
2012
Record number
2429948
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