Influence of ozone on the composite-to-composite bond

Magni, E; Ferrari, M; Papacchini, F; Hickel, R; Ilie, N

HERO ID

383704

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2010

Language

English

PMID

20054592

HERO ID 383704
In Press No
Year 2010
Title Influence of ozone on the composite-to-composite bond
Authors Magni, E; Ferrari, M; Papacchini, F; Hickel, R; Ilie, N
Journal Clinical Oral Investigations
Volume 15
Issue 2
Page Numbers 249-256
Abstract The study evaluated the effect of ozone application on the composite-to-composite bond. Three hundred and twenty cylindrical composite specimens were divided into two groups: group 1 was subjected to a 60 s ozone application, whereas group 2 remained untreated. Four subgroups were obtained from each group according to the intermediate repair agent: an adhesive, a silane, silane/adhesive combination, or flowable composite. Repair composite cylinders were built-up. The composite repair strength was tested after 24 h and after thermocycling with a shear test. Additionally, 4 mm x 4 mm x 2 mm composite specimens were prepared and stored 24 h in deionized water. Half of the specimens were subjected to ozone application and the other served as control. The elastic modulus (E) and the Vicker's hardness (VH) of the composite surfaces were tested immediately and after thermocycling. Significant differences among the experimental groups were detected (p < 0.001). The composite repair strength was affected by the pretreatment and by the intermediate agent, whereas, the thermocycling was not significant. The partial eta-squared statistics showed that the intermediate agent was the main factor affecting the composite repair strength, whereas the pretreatment played a minor role. No differences were observed between ozone and control groups when the same intermediate agent and the same aging conditions were applied. Repairing with flowable composite tended to achieve higher bond strengths (20.7 and 26.5 MPa in ozone and control groups, respectively, after 24 h). The use of silane coupling agent showed the lowest composite repair strengths. Ozone did not affect E and VH (p > 0.05) and the thermocycling affected only E (p < 0.05). In conclusion, the application of ozone does not impair the composite-to-composite bond.
Doi 10.1007/s00784-009-0370-5
Pmid 20054592
Wosid WOS:000288256200015
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Is Qa No