Bond strength and marginal adaptation of resin composites and correlations with clinical results

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Bond strength and marginal adaptation of resin composites and correlations with clinical results. / Peutzfeldt, A.; Hug, T.; Wierichs, R. J.

In: Dental Materials, Vol. 40, No. 6, 2024, p. 966-975.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Peutzfeldt, A, Hug, T & Wierichs, RJ 2024, 'Bond strength and marginal adaptation of resin composites and correlations with clinical results', Dental Materials, vol. 40, no. 6, pp. 966-975. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dental.2024.05.004

APA

Peutzfeldt, A., Hug, T., & Wierichs, R. J. (2024). Bond strength and marginal adaptation of resin composites and correlations with clinical results. Dental Materials, 40(6), 966-975. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dental.2024.05.004

Vancouver

Peutzfeldt A, Hug T, Wierichs RJ. Bond strength and marginal adaptation of resin composites and correlations with clinical results. Dental Materials. 2024;40(6):966-975. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dental.2024.05.004

Author

Peutzfeldt, A. ; Hug, T. ; Wierichs, R. J. / Bond strength and marginal adaptation of resin composites and correlations with clinical results. In: Dental Materials. 2024 ; Vol. 40, No. 6. pp. 966-975.

Bibtex

@article{b975fb61970f4eefae3339520b229915,
title = "Bond strength and marginal adaptation of resin composites and correlations with clinical results",
abstract = "Objectives: Due to innumerable confounding factors and a high number of types and brands of dental restorative materials, the clinical performance of restorative materials are sought predicted by various in vitro tests. However, only few such tests have been found to correlate well with clinical findings. Thus, the present study determined the in vitro dentin bond strength and marginal adaptation of Class II restorations and correlated the results to their clinical outcomes. Methods: Dentin bond strength (µTBS and µSBS) and marginal gap formation of Class II restorations (replica technique and SEM) were measured after 24 h and 6 m water storage using eight combinations of adhesive and resin composite. Clinical outcomes (mean survival time, Hazard Ratio, annual failure rate; n = 10.695) were gained from a data set of a retrospective multicenter study of direct restorations. Results: Significant differences were found for dentin bond strength and marginal gap formation between the restorative material groups, and negative effects of long-term storage were observed. µTBS correlated significantly with certain clinical outcomes of Class I restorations, while µSBS correlated with certain clinical outcomes of Class II, III, IV and V restorations. Marginal gap formation in enamel and number of paramarginal fractures correlated with certain clinical outcomes of Class II restorations. Significance: Using the same restorative materials in vitro as in vivo, gave significant, but weak correlations between in vitro bond strength or marginal adaptation and clinical outcomes, lending support to the use of in vitro tests in early stages of material selection.",
keywords = "(MESH): Bond strength, Adhesives, Composites, Correlation analysis, Dental restoration, Longevity, Marginal adaptation",
author = "A. Peutzfeldt and T. Hug and Wierichs, {R. J.}",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2024 The Authors",
year = "2024",
doi = "10.1016/j.dental.2024.05.004",
language = "English",
volume = "40",
pages = "966--975",
journal = "Dental Materials",
issn = "0109-5641",
publisher = "Elsevier",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Bond strength and marginal adaptation of resin composites and correlations with clinical results

AU - Peutzfeldt, A.

AU - Hug, T.

AU - Wierichs, R. J.

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2024 The Authors

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - Objectives: Due to innumerable confounding factors and a high number of types and brands of dental restorative materials, the clinical performance of restorative materials are sought predicted by various in vitro tests. However, only few such tests have been found to correlate well with clinical findings. Thus, the present study determined the in vitro dentin bond strength and marginal adaptation of Class II restorations and correlated the results to their clinical outcomes. Methods: Dentin bond strength (µTBS and µSBS) and marginal gap formation of Class II restorations (replica technique and SEM) were measured after 24 h and 6 m water storage using eight combinations of adhesive and resin composite. Clinical outcomes (mean survival time, Hazard Ratio, annual failure rate; n = 10.695) were gained from a data set of a retrospective multicenter study of direct restorations. Results: Significant differences were found for dentin bond strength and marginal gap formation between the restorative material groups, and negative effects of long-term storage were observed. µTBS correlated significantly with certain clinical outcomes of Class I restorations, while µSBS correlated with certain clinical outcomes of Class II, III, IV and V restorations. Marginal gap formation in enamel and number of paramarginal fractures correlated with certain clinical outcomes of Class II restorations. Significance: Using the same restorative materials in vitro as in vivo, gave significant, but weak correlations between in vitro bond strength or marginal adaptation and clinical outcomes, lending support to the use of in vitro tests in early stages of material selection.

AB - Objectives: Due to innumerable confounding factors and a high number of types and brands of dental restorative materials, the clinical performance of restorative materials are sought predicted by various in vitro tests. However, only few such tests have been found to correlate well with clinical findings. Thus, the present study determined the in vitro dentin bond strength and marginal adaptation of Class II restorations and correlated the results to their clinical outcomes. Methods: Dentin bond strength (µTBS and µSBS) and marginal gap formation of Class II restorations (replica technique and SEM) were measured after 24 h and 6 m water storage using eight combinations of adhesive and resin composite. Clinical outcomes (mean survival time, Hazard Ratio, annual failure rate; n = 10.695) were gained from a data set of a retrospective multicenter study of direct restorations. Results: Significant differences were found for dentin bond strength and marginal gap formation between the restorative material groups, and negative effects of long-term storage were observed. µTBS correlated significantly with certain clinical outcomes of Class I restorations, while µSBS correlated with certain clinical outcomes of Class II, III, IV and V restorations. Marginal gap formation in enamel and number of paramarginal fractures correlated with certain clinical outcomes of Class II restorations. Significance: Using the same restorative materials in vitro as in vivo, gave significant, but weak correlations between in vitro bond strength or marginal adaptation and clinical outcomes, lending support to the use of in vitro tests in early stages of material selection.

KW - (MESH): Bond strength

KW - Adhesives

KW - Composites

KW - Correlation analysis

KW - Dental restoration, Longevity

KW - Marginal adaptation

U2 - 10.1016/j.dental.2024.05.004

DO - 10.1016/j.dental.2024.05.004

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 38724332

AN - SCOPUS:85192448647

VL - 40

SP - 966

EP - 975

JO - Dental Materials

JF - Dental Materials

SN - 0109-5641

IS - 6

ER -

ID: 397345718