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Query: UMLS:C0432222 (
SEM
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47,337
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This study evaluated, in vitro, the effectiveness of diamond and carbide burs, and bur sequences to remove the plasma-sprayed titanium coating from IMZ fixture surfaces. Fifteen polishing procedures were tested. They included the use of 12, 16, 30 bladed carbide burs or bevered carbide burs and 30, 15, 8 microns mean-particles-size diamond burs. The treated surfaces were evaluated with profilometer and
SEM
. Worn burs and titanium debris produced by the grinding were observed with
SEM
. All procedures produce smoother surfaces than baseline plasma-sprayed surfaces for both Ra and Rz(DIN) parameters (P < 0.001). A roughening effect of the 8 microns mean-
grit
diamond bur and 30 bladed burs were noted. The single carbide burs produce polished surfaces affected by waviness. Waviness was minimized by sequence or diamond bur use. The carbide bur blades were variously damaged after their use. In contrast, the
grit
of diamond burs was observed to be clogged by titanium debris whose amount seemed to be inversely related to the diamond mean particle size. Debris produced by diamond burs was granular whereas that produced by carbide bladed burs showed needle or flake morphology. In conclusion, the most effective titanium plasma sprayed removal were obtained by 30 microns and 15 microns mean-particle-size diamond burs, i.e. 30 microns plus 15 microns diamond burs and carbide 12 plus 16 bladed burs used in sequence.
...
PMID:Micro-morphometric assessment of titanium plasma-sprayed coating removal using burs for the treatment of peri-implant disease. 1116 3
The purpose of this study was to evaluate in vitro the effect of a phosphoric acid etchant containing benzalkonium chloride on the dentin/adhesive interface in primary teeth. The teeth had caries lesions involving enamel and dentin, and were stored in a 2% glutaraldehyde solution for 2-4 hours. The teeth were divided into five groups of five teeth each: Group 1: Etching for 15 seconds with a semigel 32% phosphoric acid containing benzalkonium chloride; Group 2: Etching with 35% phosphoric acid for 15 seconds; Group 3: Treated with a 2% benzalkonium chloride in a alcoholic solution; Group 4: Conditioned with a 3% benzalkonium chloride in a alcoholic solution (control group); Group 5: The teeth were untreated (control group). The carious tissue was removed with a carbide bur in high-speed and copious air water spray. The overall dimensions and depths of the cavities were determined by the carious tissue removal. After the caries lesion was removed, the cavity was cleaned with an air-water spray and the dentin was treated according to the specific group. The teeth were then restored with Scotchbond Multi-Purpose Plus (3M, St. Paul, MN) and Z-100 resin-based composite (3M, St. Paul, MN) according to the manufacturer's instructions. After the teeth were restored they were stored in water for 24 hours at room temperature and the restorations polished. After storage the teeth were thermally challenged for 500 cycles in temperatures of 50 C and 550 C and then stored in 100% humidity until the sectioning procedures. The teeth were cut into two sections along the longitudinal axis through the center of the teeth and passed the mesial-distal surfaces through the restoration by using a double-face diamond disc with water coolant. The specimens were ground with 320 up to 600
grit
silicon carbide paper and polished with 6 mm and 1 mm diamond paste and 0.25 pm alumina solution. The specimens were etched with 10% citric acid for 1 minute and washed with deionized water. After that, they were deproteinized with 10% NaOCl for 5 seconds. The specimens were dried at room temperature sputter-coated with gold and observed with an
SEM
for assessment of the morphology of the bonded interface. The interface was observed to determine the presence/absence of hybrid layer formation, resin tags, and gaps. In the groups treated only with benzalkonium chloride solutions, spaces were observed in the resin/dentin interface. Similar findings were observed in the control group, which received no treatment on the dentin before primer application. In these groups neither resin tags or hybrid layer formation was observed. The presence of an amorphous layer, which was unremoved smear layer, was noted. The group treated with 35% phosphoric acid showed a hybrid layer formation (8.15 microns). This layer was linked intimately with the peritubular and intertubular dentin. Tags formation was observed towards the pulp under the hybrid layer. In these specimens the gaps were not observed between the dentin layer and bonding materials. The total removal of the smear layer was observed using 37% phosphoric acid with benzalkonium chloride. A hybrid layer (+/- 7.32 microns) and resin-tags attached to this layer were observed similar to the group in which the 35% phosphoric acid was used. The samples showed total removal of the smear layer and no gaps were observed in the dentin/adhesive interface.
...
PMID:Effect of etching agent on dentinal adhesive interface in primary teeth. 1131 44
Topographies of
grit
-blasted, etched,
grit
-blasted and etched, and microfabricated and etched surfaces of commercially pure titanium have been investigated. Such surface topographies vary across the scale range of interest for dental implants, extending from nanometers to millimeters. The complete characterization of topography requires the use of complementary methods. This study compared the topographic characterization methods of non-contact laser profilometry, interference microscopy, stereo-scanning electron microscopy (stereo-SEM), and atomic force microscopy. Non-contact laser profilometry was shown to be a useful method to characterize topographic features in the micron to millimeter range, whereas interference microscopy and stereo-
SEM
can be employed down to the submicron range. Stereo-
SEM
is particularly useful for quantifying topographies with complex, strongly corrugated ("sharp"), and high-aspect-ratio features and was shown to be complementary to non-contact laser profilometry and interference microscopy. Because of tip-related envelope problems, atomic force microscopy was not found to be suitable for the type of surfaces investigated in this study. Independent of the method used, the commonly used "integral" amplitude roughness parameters, such as Ra, Rq, or Rt, were often of limited value in the description of actual implant surfaces. The application of the wavelength-dependent roughness approach was shown to be an effective method for the description of surface topographies in the complete range of characteristic roughness and is also a useful means of examining the effects of surface treatment processes.
...
PMID:Wavelength-dependent roughness: a quantitative approach to characterizing the topography of rough titanium surfaces. 1132 5
This study evaluated the effects of cutting dentin with different types of burs on tensile bond strength using three self-etching primer bonding systems (Clearfil Liner Bond 2 [LB2], Clearfil Liner Bond 2V [2V] and Clearfil SE BOND [SE], Kuraray, Co, Ltd, Osaka, Japan). Thirty-six intact extracted human third molars were ground flat to expose occlusal dentin, followed by polishing the dentin surfaces with #600 SiC paper. The teeth were divided into four groups according to bur type and
grit
: fine cut fissure steel bur (SB600), cross cut fissure steel bur (SB703), regular
grit
diamond bur (DB). Controls were abraded with #600
grit
SiC paper (AP#600). The dentin surfaces of the SB600, SB703 and DB groups were cut under copious air-water spray with the respective burs mounted in a dental handpiece. The teeth were treated with one of three adhesive systems, then composite buildups were created with Clearfil AP-X (Kuraray Co, Ltd, Osaka, Japan). After soaking in water at 37 degrees C for 24 hours, serial vertical sections (0.7 mm thick, 7-8 slices per one tooth) were made, trimmed to form an hour-glass shape with a 1.0 mm2 cross-section and tensile bond strengths were determined at a cross-head speed of 1 mm/min. Statistical analysis was made using one and two-way ANOVA and Fisher's PLSD test (p<0.05). Eight additional molars were prepared. Burs or abrasive paper were used for
SEM
observations of the dentin surfaces of each group before and after treatment with the self-etching primers. All adhesive systems yielded the same ranking of bond strengths to the surfaces prepared with different abrasives: from highest to lowest, AP#600 > SB600 > SB703 > DB. This ranking reached statistical significance using Clearfil Liner Bond 2V (p<0.05). Therefore, when cutting dentin, selecting the adequate bur type is important for improved bonding of adhesive systems using self-etching primer to dentin.
...
PMID:Effects of different burs on dentin bond strengths of self-etching primer bonding systems. 1150 37
This study tested the hypothesis that long-term durability of resin bonds to dentin would directly relate to the nanoleakage of dentin bonding systems. Twenty extracted third molars were ground flat with #600
grit
SIC paper under running water to expose middle dentin. One-Step or Single Bond was applied to the dentin surface according to the manufacturer's instruction. A crown was built-up with Clearfil AP-X resin composite and the specimens were stored in water for 24 hours at 37 degrees C. The bonded assemblies were cut mesio-distally perpendicular to the interface in approximately 0.7 mm thick slabs and trimmed for microtensile bond strength testing. All slabs were immersed in individual bottles containing 37 degrees C water that was changed daily. Specimens were randomly assigned to four groups (one day, three, six and nine months), and at the specified time period, the specimens to be tested were randomly divided into two subgroups for testing: 50% AgNO3 and the control. In the 50% AgNO3 subgroup, the slabs were coated with fingernail varnish except for approximately 0.5 mm around the bonded interface and immersed for one hour in 50% AgNO3, followed by exposure in a photo developing solution for 12 hours just prior to debonding. The specimens in the control subgroup were soaked in water until they were debonded. Then, all specimens were subjected to microtensile bond testing. Micrographs of the fractured surfaces of the debonded specimens in the AgNO3 subgroup were taken using light microscopy. They were then subjected to image analysis by NIH Image PC (Scion, Fredrick, MD, USA), and the area of silver penetration was quantitated. The fractured surface was further analyzed under the
SEM
. Bond strength data and the silver penetration areas were subjected to two and three-way ANOVA and Fisher's PLSD test at the 95% level of confidence. Regression analysis was used to test the relationship between bond strengths and the silver penetra tion area at each time period. The tensile bond strength of both materials gradually decreased over time. Specimens bonded with One-Step showed less silver nanoleakage at one day compared to three, six and nine months (p<0.05), but there were no significant differences between the nanoleakage measured at three, six and nine months. In contrast, for specimens bonded with Single Bond, there were no statistically significant differences in the silver nanoleakage among the four time periods tested (p>0.05). No correlation was observed between bond strength and nanoleakage for either bonding system. Nanoleakage occurred in both adhesive systems, and bond strengths gradually decreased over time. However, there was no correlation between bond strength and nanoleakage for either adhesive system in this study.
...
PMID:Relationship between nanoleakage and long-term durability of dentin bonds. 1155 Oct 13
To evaluate the durability of dentin bonding over time, the nanoleakage of four dentin bonding systems (Single Bond, Stae, Clearfil SE Bond and PermaQuik) over 24 hours, three months, six months and 12 months, was investigated. Flat occlusal dentin surfaces from extracted human molars were finished with wet 600-
grit
silicon carbide paper and bonded with one of the dentin bonding systems following manufacturers' instructions. The bonded surface was covered with < 1 mm thick layer of Silux Plus resin composite and light cured for 40 seconds. The specimens in each dentin-bonding group were randomly assigned to four sub-groups and kept in phosphate buffered saline solution (pH 7.4) containing 0.01% sodium azide at 37 degrees C for 24 hours, three, six or 12 months. The margins of all specimens were finished and polished with Sof-Lex disks after initial 24-hour storage. At the end of each storage time, the surrounding tooth surfaces except for 1 mm adjacent to the restoration were coated with nail varnish. The samples were immersed in a 50% w/v solution of silver nitrate for 24 hours, placed in photodeveloping solution and exposed to fluorescent light for eight hours. The samples were cut longitudinally and buccoligually, polished, mounted on stubs, carbon coated and observed in a Field Emission-
SEM
using backscattered electron mode. The results showed that systems using phosphoric acid as the etchant had a line of silver deposition at the base of the hybrid layer. Silver deposition increased in all systems over 12-months storage, with PermaQuik changing the least. Nanoleakage of the dentin bonding systems increased slightly during the 12-month storage period, indicating that they may be subject to hydrolytic attack over time.
...
PMID:The effect of long-term storage on nanoleakage. 1169 86
Confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM) in reflection mode provides a useful means for nondestructive microscopic examination of the ultrastructural characteristics of hard tissues, including enamel and dentin. In this study, CLSM was used to examine the effects of in vitro bleaching on enamel and dentin. The crowns of extracted human third molars were sectioned below the occlusal fissure, revealing subsurface dentin and the outer surface ring of enamel. Specimens were polished with 1,200-
grit
alumina followed by fine polish lapidary film, and cut into four equal sections per tooth, allowing each tooth to serve as internal control. Sections were mounted in acrylate for handling and were bleached for 0, 15, and 30 hours in 0.25 g of commercial Opalescence whitening gel (10% carbamide peroxide), the 5.3% hydrogen peroxide gel used in Crest Whitestrips, or 5% HClO4 solution. Blank glycerin served as a control treatment. In vitro whitening was confirmed by colorimeter readings of delta b and delta L with a PR 650 spectrophotometer/colorimeter. Treated teeth were examined with CLSM comparing enamel surface, dentoenamel junction (DEJ), and dentin at approximately 5 microns subsurface to the polished surfaces under an oil immersion objective. A single sample from each treatment (30-hour whitening) was also examined by environmental variable pressure scanning electron microscopy (VP-SEM). Internal comparison of glycerin (no whitening) controls (0-, 15-, and 30-hour exposures) revealed reproducible ultrastructure, facilitating treatment comparisons. Whitened teeth revealed no significant micromorphological changes associated with the whitening process in subsurface enamel, DEJ, and dentin areas. The direct treatment of cross sections permitted simple access of all areas to whitening gel, thereby eliminating the possibility of diffusion limitation of the gel in producing artifacts. VP-
SEM
observations similarly showed no significant changes in the surfaces after treatment.
...
PMID:Effects of tooth-whitening gels on enamel and dentin ultrastructure--a confocal laser scanning microscopy pilot study. 1190 7
A laboratory study evaluated the influence of a dentin desensitizer (D/Sense 2) on the microtensile bond strength of two adhesive systems: a self-etching primer (Bistite II SC) and a one-bottle adhesive (Prime & Bond 2.1). Sixteen crown dentin discs were obtained from extracted sound human third molars. Dentin surfaces were ground with 600
grit
silicon carbide (SiC) abrasive papers to produce a standardized smear layer. Teeth were randomly divided into four groups (n=4). G1-D/Sense 2 + Prime & Bond 2.1; G2-D/Sense 2 + Bistite II SC; G3- and G4-dentin surfaces were bonded with Prime & Bond 2.1 and Bistite II SC, respectively, with no previous treatment with D/Sense 2. Eight mm high resin composite crowns (TPH Spectrum) were incrementally built-up on the treated surfaces. One sample from each group was prepared for evaluation of the hybrid layer on
SEM
. The specimens for the microtensile test were serially sectioned perpendicular to the adhesive layer to obtain 1 mm2 bounded sticks. Then, each stick was submitted to the microtensile test performed at a 0.5 mm/min crosshead speed. One-way ANOVA and Tukey test showed statistically significant differences among the groups (p<0.05). Values in MPa were: G1-17.85; G2-9.88; G3-35.16; G4-15.57. Based on the results of this study, it can be concluded that the D/Sense 2 desensitizer decreased the bond strength of Prime & Bond 2.1 and Bistite II SC bonding systems.
...
PMID:The influence of a dentin desensitizer on the microtensile bond strength of two bonding systems. 1193 6
The hybrid layer created in caries-affected dentin has not been fully elucidated and may influence bond durability. This study investigated the nanoleakage patterns of caries-affected dentin after excavation with Carisolv or conventional instruments treated with one of three adhesive systems. Flat occlusal dentin surfaces, including carious lesions, were prepared from extracted human molars and finished with wet 600-
grit
silicon carbide paper. Carious dentin was removed with Carisolv or round steel burs in conjunction with Caries Detector. PermaQuik, Single Bond or One-Up Bond F was bonded to the excavated dentin surfaces and adjacent flat occlusal surfaces and it was covered with Silux Plus resin-based composite. After 24-hour storage in 37 degrees C water, the bonded interfaces were polished to remove flash, and the surrounding tooth surfaces were coated with nail varnish. Specimens were immersed in 50% (w/v) silver nitrate solution for 24 hours, exposed to photo developing solution for eight hours, then sectioned longitudinally through the bonded, excavated dentin or "normal" dentin surfaces. The sectioned surfaces were polished, carbon coated and observed in a Field Emission-
SEM
using back scattered electrons. Silver deposition occurred along the base of the hybrid layer for all specimens. However, Single Bond showed a greater density of silver deposition in the caries-affected dentin compared with normal dentin. PermaQuik had a thicker hybrid layer in caries-affected dentin than normal dentin. One-Up Bond F exhibited a thin hybrid layer in normal dentin, but the hybrid layer was often difficult to detect in caries-affected dentin.
...
PMID:Nanoleakage of dentin adhesive systems bonded to Carisolv-treated dentin. 1212 Jul 77
This study evaluated the effect of dentin conditioner on tensile bond strength to dentin prepared with different types of burs. A self-etching primer system, Mac-Bond II (MB, Tokuyama Dental) and a phosphoric acid etching system, Single Bond (SB, 3M) were used for conditioning. Twenty-four extracted intact human molars were ground flat to expose occlusal dentin. After the dentin surfaces were polished with #600 SiC paper, the teeth were randomly divided into a control group and three experimental groups according to the bur grits used: #600 SiC paper only as the control, fine cut steel bur (SB600), crosscut steel bur (SB703) and regular
grit
diamond bur (DB) mounted in a dental handpiece utilizing water cooling. The dentin surfaces were treated with one of two adhesive systems, then composite buildups were done with Clearfil AP-X (Kuraray Medical). After soaking the bond specimens for 24 hours in 37 degrees C water, multiple vertical serial sections (0.7 mm thick, 7-8 slices per one tooth) were made, trimmed to form an hour-glass shape with a 1.0 mm2 cross-section and tensile bond strengths were determined at a crosshead speed of 1 mm/minute. Statistical analysis was made using one and two-way ANOVA and Fisher's PLSD test (p<0.05). Six additional molars were used for
SEM
observations of the dentin surfaces of each group before and after treatment with the self-etching primer of MB, and another four teeth were used to observe the resin-dentin interface of each group of SB. Using MB, the DB group produced the lowest tensile bond strength (TBS) among the groups that received bur preparation, and there were no statistical differences among SB600, SB703 and the control. For SB, the TBS of SB703 was the highest, and there were no statistical differences among the other groups and the control. The influence of the method used to prepare dentin for micro-tensile bond strength testing was dependent on the adhesive system used.
...
PMID:Effect of self-etching primer vs phosphoric acid etchant on bonding to bur-prepared dentin. 1221 62
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