GIC Flashcards

1
Q

What reaction is GIC made from?

A

acid-phase reaction with 3 phases

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2
Q

What are the 3 phases of the acid-base reaction?

A

Dissolution (acidic attack of glass surface)

Gelation (early cross-linking by Ca++)

Hardening (substitution of Ca++ by Al+++)

gives salt and water

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3
Q

What makes GIC very soluble?

A

All the COOH groups together in the long chain polyacid

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4
Q

What are the properties of GIC?

A
  • Adhesion to mineralised tooth tissues
  • F- release and associated protection against caries
  • Antibacterial activity?
  • Set without exotherm and no shrinkage.
  • Biocompatible
  • May be radio-opaque.
  • BUT relatively poor aesthetics, poor wear resistance, brittle, no command set, technique sensitive…
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5
Q

Why can GIC adhere to the tooth?

A

GIC has acid degraded particles (calcium) - form salt bridges with the calcium in the tooth tissue

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6
Q

What are the clinical uses for GICs?

A
  • Restoration of deciduous (primary) teeth.
  • Class V restorations in permanent teeth.
  • Erosion/abrasion lesions.
  • Have been used as fissure sealants.
  • Atraumatic restorative treatment(ART)
  • Luting cements.
  • Cavity bases.
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7
Q

What are the contra-indications for GIC?

A

Highly loaded sites or incisal edge

or where aesthetics are important

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8
Q

What is a glass Carbomer?

A

Documented as a heat cured material and marketed as a potential alternative to GICs with similar indications of use

  • stronger and smoother finish due to finer filler size, less soluble and has better translucency and possible fluoride release
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9
Q

what mechanisms may make fluoride antibacterial?

A

effects on metabolism via enolase inhibition and/or metabolic toxicity

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10
Q

When may fluoride not be antibacterial?

A

when microorganisms are protected within a biofilm.

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11
Q

How does fluoride ion exchange work?

A
  • interaction with HA of enamel and dentine
  • F ions able to substitute for OH groups in crystal structure to generate FA
  • FA very resistant to demineralisation
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12
Q

Which hybrid biomaterials are treated as a GIC?

A

GIC
Cermet glass PVP carbomer
RM- GIC

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13
Q

Which hybrid biomaterials are treated as a composite resin?

A

GIomer
Compomer
Ormocer
Composite resin

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14
Q

How is a RM-GIC different to GIC?

A

Like a Glass-ionomer but with the addition of a water miscible monomer hydroxyethylmethacrylate (HEMA) and a photoinitiator

sets with both an acid-base reaction and photo-polymerisation

shares GIC chemical bond to untreated dentine

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15
Q

How does Dyract AP release fluoride?

A

Needs to absorb water before it can release fluoride

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