This study examined the effect of air abrasion and thermocycling on the adaptation and shear bond strength, of composite resin bonded to dentin using etch-and-rinse and self-etch resin adhesives. Confocal microscopy showed both adhesives closely adapted to dentin and a significantly (p<0.001) greater number of resin tags were observed for the etch-and-rinse adhesive. Air abrasion significantly increased resin tag length (p<0.05) for the etch-and-rinse adhesive and significantly increased the number (p<0.001), length (p<0.001) and thickness (p<0.01) of tags for the self-etch adhesive. However, air abrasion resulted in defect formation within the hybrid layer and thermocycling caused separation of the hybrid layer from adjacent dentin containing resin tags. A significant (p<0.05) reduction in shear bond strength was observed for the etch-and-rinse adhesive following thermocycling. Both adhesive systems adapted well to dentin in vitro and shear bond strengths were similar. The area of tag penetration into dentin was significantly (p<0.0001) enhanced following air abrasion.
Telephone: + 61 7 334 63860; Facsimile: + 61 7 334 60330 Keywords 2 Structure-property relations, hydrolytic degradation, infrared spectroscopy, in-vitro cytocompatibility, poly(PEG-co-lactide) hydrogel
AbstractA series of the biodegradable copolyester hydrogels was prepared using a redoxinitiated polymerization with a constant 1:9 mole ratio of the Boltorn-based acrylate and diacrylate triblock comacromonomers. The Boltorn® macromonomer was derived from the hyperbranched polyester Boltorn H20, which was functionalized at each terminus with poly(ethylene glycol) acrylate, and the diacrylate triblock macromonomer was poly(lactide-b-ethylene glycol-b-lactide) diacrylate. The hydrolysis of the copolyesters at pH 7.4 in a phosphate buffered saline solution at 37 °C was studied using ATR-FTIR spectroscopy. It was found that the presence of the Boltorn, the PEG and lactide block lengths both play vital roles in determining the structure-property relationships in these materials. The ATR-FTIR studies showed that with increasing lactide segment length, the rate of ester hydrolysis increased due to the increased concentration of the hydrolytically-sensitive PLA ester groups in the network. However, incorporation of Boltorn into the PLA-PEG-PLA copolymer did not significantly change the kinetic rate constant for hydrolysis of the PLA segments.The cytocompatibility of a typical one of these materials in the presence of its degradation by-products was assessed using cultured osteoblasts from the rat. The hydrogel was degraded for 28 days and found to be cytocompatible with osteoblasts over days 23 to 28 of the hydrolysis period.
A novel water-soluble macromonomer based on octavinyl silsesquioxane has been synthesized and contains vinyl-terminated PEG 400 in each of the eight arms to promote water solubility. The macromonomer was characterized by NMR and FTIR and its aqueous solution properties examined. In water it exhibits an LCST with a cloud point at 23 °C for a 10 wt % aqueous solution. It is surface active with a CMC of 1.5 × 10(-5) M in water and in 20:80 v/v acetone/water the CMC is 7.1 × 10(-5) M, and TEM images showed spherical 22 nm aggregates in aqueous solution above the CMC. The macromonomer was copolymerized in a 20:80 v/v acetone/water mixture with a vinyl-terminated, triblock copolymer of lactide-PEG-lactide to form a library of cross-linked hydrogels that were designed for use as scaffolds for alveolar bone repair. The cross-linked copolymer networks were shown to contain a range of nm-μm sized pores and their swelling properties in water and PBS at pH 7.4 were examined. At pH 7.4 the hydrogel networks undergo a slow hydrolysis with the release of principally PEG and lactic acid fragments. The hydrogels were shown to be noncytotoxic toward fibroblast cultures at pH 7.4, both initially (days 1-5) and after significant hydrolysis had taken place (days 23-28).
This study investigated changes in alveolar bone height in free-ranging koalas of different age groups. Twenty-seven free-ranging Queensland koalas (15 female, 12 male), admitted to the Moggill Koala Hospital, Brisbane, were used in this study. Koalas were divided into three groups (young, adult, old) on the basis of tooth wear, each group containing nine animals. Defleshed jaws were examined for the presence of alveolar bone defects. The distance from the cemento-enamel junction and the interproximal crestal alveolar bone height was measured on the buccal aspects of the second and third molars. Jaws were photographed and radiographed. Bone defects (dehiscences and fenestrations) were observed in both jaws and were predominantly located on the buccal aspect of the alveolar process. The loss of height of crestal alveolar bone, relative to the cemento-enamel junction, increased with age, with 25 koalas showing moderate to severe bone loss and only two koalas having none/mild loss levels at all measurement sites. Female koalas had higher frequency of ‘none/mild’ cases of bone loss than did males. There was no variation in levels of alveolar bone loss between the upper and lower jaws or the corresponding right and left arches.
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