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Publication year
2010Source
Journal of Dentistry, 38, 9, (2010), pp. 731-5ISSN
Annotation
01 september 2010
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor
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Organization
Dentistry
Journal title
Journal of Dentistry
Volume
vol. 38
Issue
iss. 9
Page start
p. 731
Page end
p. 5
Subject
NCEBP 7: Effective primary care and public healthAbstract
OBJECTIVES: To test newer glass-ionomer-based materials as sealant materials. One glass-ionomer sealant was light-cured to obtain an early setting reaction. The null-hypothesis tested was: there is no difference in marginal leakage of sealants produced with high-viscosity glass-ionomer, with and without energy supplied, and that of glass-carbomer, in comparison with resin composite sealants in vitro. METHODS: Materials used were Clinpro, Ketac Molar Easymix and Glass-Carbomer. Sealants were placed in the occlusal surface of 89 molar teeth, thermocycled for 5000 cycles and evaluated using micro-CT for silver nitrate penetration depth at the enamel-sealant interface by two trained evaluators. Data were analysed, using ANOVA and Scheffe's test. RESULTS: Glass-carbomer sealants showed one or more 'fracture lines' in the material and at the enamel-material interface, filled with a kind of transparent, but not black coloured, material. High-viscosity glass-ionomer sealants with and without energy supplied had statistically significantly lower mean marginal leakage scores than sealants produced by composite resin (p<0.01). No marginal leakage was found in the high-viscosity glass-ionomer group without energy supplied. CONCLUSIONS: The high-viscosity glass-ionomer (Ketac Molar Easymix) sealants had lower marginal leakage than resin composite sealants, and should be tested in vivo. Glass-carbomer sealants were non-interpretable.
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- Faculty of Medical Sciences [92283]
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