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Silver diamine fluoride and resin-dentin bonding: Optimization of application protocols

Merve Uctasli, Thiago Henrique Scarabello Stape, Mustafa Murat Mutluay, Arzu Tezvergil‐Mutluay

2023International Journal of Adhesion and Adhesives23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

To evaluate the effect of SDF-based treatments following delayed bonding and surface treatment approaches on resin-dentin bonding efficiency of a universal adhesive under different application modes. Mid-coronal dentin surfaces from sound third molars were randomly treated with 38% silver diamine fluoride (SDF) and/or additionally with potassium iodide (SDF/KI). Untreated dentin served as control. SDF-treated teeth were assigned to groups according to surface treatment approaches (air-abrasion and water rinsing), the application mode of a mild universal adhesive (etch-and-rinse or self-etch) and delayed bonding (immediate, 7, 15 or 30 days). Microtensile bond strength (n = 5), SEM analyses of hybrid layer formation and dentin etching patterns and dentin permeability were evaluated. Data were analyzed with factorial ANOVA. SDF-based treatments affected dentin bonding depending on application mode and surface treatment approaches (p<0.001). Etch-and-rinse bonding was not affected by SDF-based treatments (p<0.05), producing more homogenous hybrid layers. While dentin etching patterns of etch-and-rinse application were not affected by SDF-based treatments, self-etching presented limitations. Bond strength reductions of self-etched dentin were restored by silver-removal strategies containing a water-rinsing step (p<0.05). Delayed bonding additionally reduced dentin permeability (p<0.05), further decreasing with longer periods (p<0.05). Although the negative effect of SDF-based treatments on resin-dentin bonding can be avoided by strategies incorporating water-rinsing before hybridization, delayed bonding brings additional advantages due to higher mineral deposition. While the etch-and-rinse technique avoids major bonding drawbacks to SDF-treated dentin, self-etch bonding requires removal of excess silver deposits before hybridization. Performing SDF-based treatments and dentin hybridization in separate sessions (>15 days apart) potentialize mineral deposition improving caries control and service life of composite restorations.

Topics & Concepts

DentinAdhesiveMaterials scienceBond strengthMolarComposite materialDentistryLayer (electronics)MedicineDental materials and restorationsDental Erosion and TreatmentDental Research and COVID-19
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