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Comparison of Elastic Modulus and Compressive Strength of Ariadent and Harvard Polycarboxylate Cement and Vitremer Resin Modified Glass Ionomer

TLDR
It is claimed that up to 20,000 people have died in the last year as a result of stampede-related injuries in the Middle East.
Abstract
Background: Luting agents are used to attach indirect restoration into or on the tooth. Poor mechanical properties of cement may be a cause of fracture of this layer and lead to caries and restoration removal. The purpose of this study was to compare the elastic modulus and compressive strength of Ariadent (A Poly) and Harvard polycarboxylate (H Poly) cements and Vitremer resin modified glass ionomer (RGl). Materials & Methods: In this experimental study 15 specimens were prepared form each experimental cement in Laboratory of Tehran Oil Refining Company. The cylindrical specimens were compressed in Instron machine after 24 hours. Elastic modulus and compressive strength were calculated from stress/strain curve of each specimen. One way ANOVA and Tukey tests were used for statistical analysis and P values<0.05 were considered to be statistically significant. Results: The mean elastic modulus and mean compressive strength were 2.2 GPa and 87.8MPa in H poly, 2.4 GPa and 56.5 MPa in A Poly, and 0.8GPa and 105.6 MPa in RGI, respectively. Statistical analysis showed that compressive strength and elastic modulus of both polycarboxylate cements were significantly different from hybrid ionomer (P<0.05), but the difference between elastic modulus of two types of polycarboxilate cements was not statistically significant. Compressive strength of two polycarboxilate cements were significantly different (P<0.05). Conclusion: An ideal lutting agent must have the best mechanical properties. Between the tested luttins RGl cement had the lowest elastic modulus and the highest compressive strength, but the A poly cement had the highest elastic modulus and the lowest compressive strength. Therefore none of them was the best.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Tensile Properties of Mineralized and Demineralized Human and Bovine Dentin

TL;DR: The results indicate that collagen contributes about 30% of the UTS of mineralized dentin, which is higher than was expected, and the ultimate tensile strength and modulus of elasticity of mineralization and demineralized Dentin are compared.
Journal ArticleDOI

Unserviceable crowns and fixed partial dentures: life-span and causes for loss of serviceability.

TL;DR: The life-span of restorations, as well as causes of loss of serviceability, were determined, and caries accounted for the largest number of failures.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanical properties of dental luting cements.

TL;DR: Cements differed considerably with respect to mechanical properties, including compressive proportional limit, compressive resilience, compressed strength, compression toughness, diametral tensile strength, flexural strength, and flexural toughness.
Journal Article

Load fatigue of teeth restored with cast posts and cores and complete crowns.

TL;DR: Twenty-five extracted human central incisors were divided into five groups and prepared for complete cast crowns and showed that the 0.5 mm and 1.0 mm ferrule lengths failed at a significantly lower number of cycles than the 1.5 ml and 2.0 ml teeth restored in this study.
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