scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Clinical effectiveness of contemporary adhesives: a systematic review of current clinical trials.

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
Comparison of retention of class-V adhesive restorations as a measure to determine clinical bonding effectiveness of adhesives revealed that glass‐ionomers most effectively and durably bond to tooth tissue.
About
This article is published in Dental Materials.The article was published on 2005-09-01. It has received 744 citations till now.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

An in vitro comparison of bacterial leakage of three common restorative materials used as an intracoronal barrier.

TL;DR: Evaluating quantitatively the effectiveness of three different restorative materials used as an intracoronal barrier to prevent microleakage of endodontically treated teeth found no significant difference in bacterial leakage between the three experimental groups tested.
Journal ArticleDOI

Controlled, prospective, randomized, clinical split-mouth evaluation of partial ceramic crowns luted with a new, universal adhesive system/resin cement: results after 18 months

TL;DR: The 18-month clinical performance of a new universal adhesive/composite combination showed no differences with respect to bonding strategy and may be recommended for luting PCCs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of enamel bevel on the clinical performance of resin composite restorations placed in non-carious cervical lesions.

TL;DR: Enamel beveling may not be clinically relevant for the retention of composite restorations in NCCLs after 12 months according to the modified U.S. Public Health Service criteria.
Journal ArticleDOI

3-year clinical effectiveness of one-step adhesives in non-carious cervical lesions.

TL;DR: Both one-step self-etch adhesives presented an equally favourable clinical effectiveness at 3 years, and no significant difference in bonding effectiveness was noticed between a HEMA-rich and Hema-free one- step adhesive.
Journal ArticleDOI

Microleakage of Class I and II Composite Resin Restorations Using a Sonic-resin Placement System

TL;DR: The materials (SonicFill vs Herculite Ultra), C-factors, and insertion techniques (bulk vs incremental) did not appear to be significant influences with regard to marginal microleakage; however, the type of preparation cavity (Class I vs Class II) and the subsequent bonding surface (enamel vs dentin [cementum]) proved to besignificant factors.
References
More filters
Journal Article

Buonocore memorial lecture, adhesion to enamel and dentin: current status and future challenges

TL;DR: The basic bonding mechanism to enamel and dentin of these three approaches is demonstrated by means of ultramorphological and chemical characterization of tooth-biomaterial interfacial interactions and confirms that conventional three-step etch&rinse adhesives still perform most favorably and are most reliable in the long-term.
Journal ArticleDOI

Setting Stress in Composite Resin in Relation to Configuration of the Restoration

TL;DR: It was shown that in most of the clinically relevant cavity configurations, the stress-relieving flow is not sufficient to preserve adhesion to dentin by dentin-bonding agents.
Journal ArticleDOI

Comparative Study on Adhesive Performance of Functional Monomers

TL;DR: Besides self-etching dentin, specific functional monomers have additional chemical bonding efficacy that is expected to contribute to their adhesive potential to tooth tissue.
Journal ArticleDOI

Aggressiveness of contemporary self-etching systems. I: Depth of penetration beyond dentin smear layers.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the aggressiveness of three self-etching adhesive systems in penetrating dentin smear layers of different thickness using transmission electron microscopy (TEM).
Journal ArticleDOI

Four-year Water Degradation of Total-etch Adhesives Bonded to Dentin

TL;DR: It is concluded that resin bonded to enamel protected the resin-dentin bond against degradation, while direct exposure to water for 4 years affected bonds produced by two-step total-etch adhesives.
Related Papers (5)