The purpose was to investigate the influence of curing devices and curing times on the yellow value (b-value) of composites, ormocers and compomers after performing a suntest (EN ISO 7491). Eight samples of Charisma (CH), Durafill (DU), Definite (DE), and Dyract AP (DY) each were light cured with Translux Energy (tungsten halogen light) for 20, 40 or 60 s and with Apollo 95-E (plasma light) for 3, 10 or 20 s. All samples were subjected to a suntest. Before and after the suntest the yellow values (b-values) were determined and the change (Delta b) was calculated. When cured with Translux Energy for 20 and 40 s DU, CH, and DY revealed significantly negative Delta b-values. The b-value of DE remained nearly constant. When cured for 60 s, DU and DE shifted to more yellow while CH and DY still bleached a little. When cured with Apollo 95-E, a dramatic bleaching process of all materials investigated occurred after the suntest (significant negative Delta b). It may be concluded that the bleaching of composites, ormocers and compomers depends on (i) the used light curing device and (ii) the chosen curing times. The tungsten halogen light provided highly significantly superior results.
During the past few years, the interest in using ceramic inlays and veneers has increased. New materials and methods have been introduced to bond these restorations to resinous materials. Since our knowledge of how to optimize such bonding is limited, the objective of this study was to test the hypothesis that various surface treatment variables and combinations of these variables affect the strength of the ceramic/composite interphase of ceramic inlays differently. The influences of material composition, surface-roughening method, silane treatment, silane heat treatment, and storage condition on bond strength were investigated. Three ceramics (Dicor, Mirage, Vitabloc), three surface-roughening methods (etching, sandblasting, grinding), three silane treatments (gamma-methacryloxypropyltrimethoxysilane [MPS], MPS+paratoluidine, vinyltrichlorosilane), two heat treatments (20 degrees C for 60 s, 100 degrees C for 60 s), and two storage conditions (24-hour dry, one yr in water at 37 degrees C) were studied. For each of the 108 combinations, five specimens were tested. Ceramic cylinders were treated according to group assignment and bonded to blocks of the same ceramic material with a dual-cured resin. The shear bond strength was determined, and the experimental factors were evaluated by analysis of variance. The results showed that surface-roughening method had the strongest effect on bond strength, while ceramic selection had the least significant effect. Of the surface-roughening methods, etching was associated with higher bond strength values than either sandblasting or grinding.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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