Composite bonding Flashcards
How does CR bond to enamel?
Enamel:
• Resin is hydrophobic
• It bonds well to enamel’s crystalline structure which is dry via micromechanical retention
• Acid etch with orthophosphoric acid to create enamel tags, apply bond agent which CR bonds too
Describe dentine
- Dentine is made of different things; peritubular dentine, intratubular dentine, tubules and odontoblastic process
- Peritubular dentine and intratubular dentine are highly mineralised. Point: dentine is structurally different to enamel
- Dentine is hydrophilic and it more wet
- Water interferes with bonding
Explain CR’s bonding mechanism with dentine
- Bonding to dentine involves not only etch, but something called a primer
- The primer is a methacrylate monomer that is dissolved in a solvent
- Primer bonds to both dentine and resin
- After acid etch and smear layer removal, the primer flows into the open tubules and the decalcified dentine
- The bonding resin covers the primed network within dentinal tubules
- The primer, containing hydrophobic and hydrophilic monomers, copolymerizes with the adhesive (unfilled resin)
- A hybrid layer forms that is composed of resin tags intermingled with bonding resin
What are some dentine adhesive systems?
- More simplified systems exists now where primers have been combined with adhesives and/ or etchants
- Some options may be self-etching instead of the need to etch and rinse
What are issues with self-etch?
- The infiltration of resin occurs simultaneously with the self-etching process
- Is the enamel adequately etched?
- What are the long term effects of incorporating dissolved smear layer remnants?
- Leakage??, ↓ bonding, hydrolytic degradation
- Dissolved calcium and phosphate ions in the adhesive attract more water than the 3 step adhesives: ↓ resin-dentine bond
- This results in nano-leakage, which is nano- sized pores that form within hybrid layers
- Acid in etch & rinse and self-etch bonding agents can activate matrix metalloproteinases (MMP’s) in dentine which results in the breakdown and loss of collagen fibres within the hybrid zone
What are factors affecting the placement of CR?
Depth of cure
Oxygen inhibition layer
Unreacted C=C bonds
Describe depth of cure as a factor affecting the placement of CR?
Filler type and composition
• Smaller filler particles scatter light more= difficult to penetrate the deeper regions of the material. Greater exposure times are required
• The higher the filler = more difficult for the light to penetrate the composite
Shade and Translucency
• Darker shades require a longer curing time because the light is more readily absorbed by the dark colour and does not transmit through the material
Intensity and duration of light curing • Light should be placed as close as possible to composite, otherwise, inverse square law. • Cure 2mm material for 40 seconds • Halogen light: 450 nW/cm² LED: 470nm.
Describe the oxygen inhibition layer as a factor affecting the placement of CR?
- When the surface is exposed to oxygen in the air, it results in a thin layer of uncured layer of bonding resin. This stops polymerisation
- Once another layer of composite is placed over the bonding resin, the oxygen inhibited layer and the new layer are chemically bonded when the second layer is cured
- The uncured layer is usually removed during finishing and polishing or can be removed by cotton pellet as with fissure sealants.
Describe the unreacted C=C bonds as a factor affecting the placement of CR?
- Some C=C bonds may remain unreacted even after curing
- This allows old composite bond to new composite
- Some of the unreacted C=C bonds in the old material will react with the setting matrix of the new material
- Obviously the strength of the bond is much lower than that of a newly placed material