ObjectivesThe purpose of this study was to assess the color change of three types of
composite resins exposed to coffee and cola drink, and the effect of repolishing
on the color stability of these composites after staining.Materials and MethodsFifteen specimens (15 mm diameter and 2 mm thick) were fabricated from microhybrid
(Esthet-X; Dentsply and Filtek Z-250; 3M ESPE) and high-density hybrid (Surefil;
Dentsply) composites, and were finished and polished with aluminum oxide discs
(Sof-Lex; 3M ESPE). Color of the specimens was measured according to the CIE
L*a*b* system in a reflection spectrophotometer (PCB 6807; BYK Gardner). After
baseline color measurements, 5 specimens of each resin were immersed in different
staining solutions for 15 days: G1 - distilled water (control), G2 - coffee, G3 -
cola soft drink. Afterwards, new color measurement was performed and the specimens
were repolished and submitted to new color reading. Color stability was determined
by the difference (∆) between the coordinates L*, a*, and b* obtained from
the specimens before and after immersion into the solutions and after
repolishing.ResultsThere was no statistically significant difference (ANOVA, Tukey's test; p>0.05)
among the ∆ values for the different types of composites after staining or
repolishing. For all composite resins, coffee promoted more color change
(∆>3.3) than distilled water and the cola soft drink. After repolishing,
the ∆ values of the specimens immersed in coffee decreased to clinically
acceptable values (∆<3.3), but remained significantly higher than those
of the other groups.ConclusionsNo significant difference was found among composite resins or between color values
before and after repolishing of specimens immersed in distilled water and cola.
Immersing specimens in coffee caused greater color change in all types of
composite resins tested in this study and repolishing contributed to decrease
staining to clinically acceptable ∆ values.
ObjectiveThe purpose of this study was to evaluate the effect of mouth rinse solutions on
color stability, surface roughness and microhardness of two composite resins. Material and Methods Fifty test specimens of each composite (Filtek Z250 and Z350; 3M ESPE) were made
using a teflon matrix (12x2 mm). Color, surface roughness and Knoop microhardness
baseline measurements of each specimen were made and specimens (n=10) were
immersed in 5 mouth rinse solutions: G1: distilled water (control), G2: Plax
Classic, G3: Plax alcohol-free; G4: Periogard, and G5: Listerine. Final
measurements of color, roughness and microhardness were performed and the results
submitted to statistical analysis (2-way ANOVA, Bonferroni's test; p<0.05).
Results The most significant color change was observed for Z250 when immersed in
Listerine (p<0.05). Z350 showed greater color change when immersed in Plax
alcohol-free (p<0.05), but with no significant difference for Listerine
(p>0.05). With regard to roughness, both composites showed significant changes
when immersed in Listerine in comparison with Plax alcohol-free (p<0.05).
Microhardness of Z350 was shown to be significantly changed when the composite was
immersed in Plax alcohol-free (p<0.05). Conclusion Composite changes depended on the material itself rather than the mouth rinse
solution used.
The purpose of this study was to evaluate, in vitro, the color stability of three composite resins of two different shades (A3 and C3) cured with either a quartz tungsten halogen (QTH) or a light emitting diode (LED) source. Forty specimens (20 x 2 mm) were prepared for each composite (Tetric Ceram ® , Heliomolar ® and Esthet-X ® ), being 20 for each shade. In each group, 10 specimens were light-cured using the QTH unit and 10 with the LED source. The shade of the materials was evaluated before and after submitting the specimens to artificial accelerated aging (4 h UV-B/4 h condensing vapor), using a reflection spectrophotometer. ΔE means were calculated and analyzed statistically by 2-way ANOVA and Tukey's test at 5% significance level. Both A3 and C3 shades of Esthet-X composite resin showed the lowest color change when cured with the QTH light, while Tetric C3 cured with the QTH light showed the highest color change.
The different glide path techniques promoted minimal apical transportation, and the reciprocating single-file system tested remained relatively centralized within the root canal. Also, the different techniques interfered in the cleaning effectiveness of the reciprocating system.
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