Orthodontic Attachment Adhesion to Ceramic Surfaces

Anca Labunet,1 Andreea Kui,2 Andrada Voina-Tonea,1 Alexandra Vigu,1 Sorina Sava1 1Dental Materials Discipline, “Iuliu Hatieganu” Medicine and Pharmacy University Cluj-Napoca, Cluj, Romania; 2Prosthodontics Discipline, “Iuliu Hatieganu” Medicine and Pharmacy Un...

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Main Authors: Labunet A, Kui A, Voina-Tonea A, Vigu A, Sava S
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Dove Medical Press 2021-03-01
Series:Clinical, Cosmetic and Investigational Dentistry
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.dovepress.com/orthodontic-attachment-adhesion-to-ceramic-surfaces-peer-reviewed-article-CCIDE
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spelling doaj-d12ff4f9e32d4135b466491109a860262021-03-16T22:01:26ZengDove Medical PressClinical, Cosmetic and Investigational Dentistry1179-13572021-03-01Volume 13839563164Orthodontic Attachment Adhesion to Ceramic SurfacesLabunet AKui AVoina-Tonea AVigu ASava SAnca Labunet,1 Andreea Kui,2 Andrada Voina-Tonea,1 Alexandra Vigu,1 Sorina Sava1 1Dental Materials Discipline, “Iuliu Hatieganu” Medicine and Pharmacy University Cluj-Napoca, Cluj, Romania; 2Prosthodontics Discipline, “Iuliu Hatieganu” Medicine and Pharmacy University Cluj-Napoca, Cluj, RomaniaCorrespondence: Andreea Kui 32 Clinicilor Street, Cluj-Napoca, Cluj, RomaniaTel +0040-264597844Email andreeakui@gmail.comAbstract: Ceramic materials are constantly evolving, achieving good functionality and aesthetics. Bonding to ceramics may be difficult because of high toxicity procedures and risk of surface damage. The review aims to answer several research questions: Is there a golden standard for bonding to ceramic? Are there adhesives or types of photopolymerization lamps that produce a higher bond strength on certain types of ceramics rather than others? Articles focusing on the bonding process of orthodontic attachments to ceramic surfaces searched in Pubmed, Medline and Embase, published between 1990 and 2018 were revised. Exclusions concerned bonding to non-ceramic surfaces, bonding to ceramic surfaces that are not destined for orthodontics or laser usage. Forty-nine articles that matched the inclusion criteria were researched. The following categories of original research articles were compared and discussed: metallic brackets bonding to ceramic surfaces, ceramic brackets to ceramic surfaces, bonding to new types of ceramics, such as zirconia, lithium disilicate, different photopolymerisation devices used on bonding to ceramics. Some types of adhesive may achieve minimal bond strength (6– 8 MPa) even on glazed ceramic. Ceramic surface preparation may be done by sandblasting or hydrofluoric acid (60s application and 9.6%) with generally similar results. Studies rarely show any statistical difference and there are reduced number of samples in most studies. Ceramic brackets show better adhesion to ceramic surfaces and the same bonding protocol is advised. A higher bond strength may lead to ceramic surface. Few studies focus on newer types of ceramics; additional research is necessary. There is no clear evidence that a certain type of photopolymerization device produces higher shear bond strength values.Keywords: ceramic bond, adhesion, shear bond strengthhttps://www.dovepress.com/orthodontic-attachment-adhesion-to-ceramic-surfaces-peer-reviewed-article-CCIDEceramic bondadhesionshear bond strength
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Labunet A
Kui A
Voina-Tonea A
Vigu A
Sava S
spellingShingle Labunet A
Kui A
Voina-Tonea A
Vigu A
Sava S
Orthodontic Attachment Adhesion to Ceramic Surfaces
Clinical, Cosmetic and Investigational Dentistry
ceramic bond
adhesion
shear bond strength
author_facet Labunet A
Kui A
Voina-Tonea A
Vigu A
Sava S
author_sort Labunet A
title Orthodontic Attachment Adhesion to Ceramic Surfaces
title_short Orthodontic Attachment Adhesion to Ceramic Surfaces
title_full Orthodontic Attachment Adhesion to Ceramic Surfaces
title_fullStr Orthodontic Attachment Adhesion to Ceramic Surfaces
title_full_unstemmed Orthodontic Attachment Adhesion to Ceramic Surfaces
title_sort orthodontic attachment adhesion to ceramic surfaces
publisher Dove Medical Press
series Clinical, Cosmetic and Investigational Dentistry
issn 1179-1357
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Anca Labunet,1 Andreea Kui,2 Andrada Voina-Tonea,1 Alexandra Vigu,1 Sorina Sava1 1Dental Materials Discipline, “Iuliu Hatieganu” Medicine and Pharmacy University Cluj-Napoca, Cluj, Romania; 2Prosthodontics Discipline, “Iuliu Hatieganu” Medicine and Pharmacy University Cluj-Napoca, Cluj, RomaniaCorrespondence: Andreea Kui 32 Clinicilor Street, Cluj-Napoca, Cluj, RomaniaTel +0040-264597844Email andreeakui@gmail.comAbstract: Ceramic materials are constantly evolving, achieving good functionality and aesthetics. Bonding to ceramics may be difficult because of high toxicity procedures and risk of surface damage. The review aims to answer several research questions: Is there a golden standard for bonding to ceramic? Are there adhesives or types of photopolymerization lamps that produce a higher bond strength on certain types of ceramics rather than others? Articles focusing on the bonding process of orthodontic attachments to ceramic surfaces searched in Pubmed, Medline and Embase, published between 1990 and 2018 were revised. Exclusions concerned bonding to non-ceramic surfaces, bonding to ceramic surfaces that are not destined for orthodontics or laser usage. Forty-nine articles that matched the inclusion criteria were researched. The following categories of original research articles were compared and discussed: metallic brackets bonding to ceramic surfaces, ceramic brackets to ceramic surfaces, bonding to new types of ceramics, such as zirconia, lithium disilicate, different photopolymerisation devices used on bonding to ceramics. Some types of adhesive may achieve minimal bond strength (6– 8 MPa) even on glazed ceramic. Ceramic surface preparation may be done by sandblasting or hydrofluoric acid (60s application and 9.6%) with generally similar results. Studies rarely show any statistical difference and there are reduced number of samples in most studies. Ceramic brackets show better adhesion to ceramic surfaces and the same bonding protocol is advised. A higher bond strength may lead to ceramic surface. Few studies focus on newer types of ceramics; additional research is necessary. There is no clear evidence that a certain type of photopolymerization device produces higher shear bond strength values.Keywords: ceramic bond, adhesion, shear bond strength
topic ceramic bond
adhesion
shear bond strength
url https://www.dovepress.com/orthodontic-attachment-adhesion-to-ceramic-surfaces-peer-reviewed-article-CCIDE
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AT voinatoneaa orthodonticattachmentadhesiontoceramicsurfaces
AT vigua orthodonticattachmentadhesiontoceramicsurfaces
AT savas orthodonticattachmentadhesiontoceramicsurfaces
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