Effect of thermal and mechanical cycles on shear bond strength of zirconia core to porcelain veneer under different surface treatments

Background. Due to the fragile nature of all-ceramic restorations, it is necessary to provide an appropriate (core) infrastructure to support the veneering porcelain. The veneer detachment and chipping are disadvantages of these restorations. Several techniques have been proposed to minimize these p...

وصف كامل

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
الحاوية / القاعدة:Journal of Dental Research, Dental Clinics, Dental Prospects
المؤلفون الرئيسيون: Tahereh Ghaffari, Elnaz Moslehifard, Mehrnaz Motiei
التنسيق: مقال
اللغة:الإنجليزية
منشور في: Tabriz University of Medical Sciences 2019-11-01
الموضوعات:
الوصول للمادة أونلاين:https://joddd.tbzmed.ac.ir/PDF/joddd-27373
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author Tahereh Ghaffari
Elnaz Moslehifard
Mehrnaz Motiei
author_facet Tahereh Ghaffari
Elnaz Moslehifard
Mehrnaz Motiei
author_sort Tahereh Ghaffari
collection DOAJ
container_title Journal of Dental Research, Dental Clinics, Dental Prospects
description Background. Due to the fragile nature of all-ceramic restorations, it is necessary to provide an appropriate (core) infrastructure to support the veneering porcelain. The veneer detachment and chipping are disadvantages of these restorations. Several techniques have been proposed to minimize these problems. This study evaluated the effect of thermal and mechanical cycles on the shear bond strength of zirconia core to porcelain veneer under different surface treatments. Methods. Sixty disk-like zirconium samples were randomly divided into three groups. The first group was polished and veneered with porcelain, without additional surface treatments. The two other groups were subjected to different surface treatments (modified aluminum oxide by silica and activator‒aluminum oxide and primer) and veneering with porcelain. Half of the samples in each group were subjected to 6000 thermal cycles and 20,000 masticatory cycles of 50 N to imitate the intraoral conditions; the other half were placed in distilled water at 37°C until the shear strength test. Each sample was then buried using PMMA in a mounting jig so that the gap between the core and the veneer could be placed upward. Then, they were exposed to shear stress using a universal testing machine at a rate of 1 mm/min until fracture. The maximum force leading to the fracture was recorded. Results. Comparison of the groups showed that the highest shear bond strength was related to the samples treated with aluminum oxide and primer, without applying thermal and masticatory cycles, which indicated no significant difference from the group treated with aluminum oxide and primer, with thermal and masticatory cycles. The lowest shear bond strengths were related to the polished samples without surface treatment by applying thermal and masticatory cycles (P=0.001), which indicated no significant difference from the untreated group without thermal and masticatory cycles. Conclusion. Based on the results, treatment with aluminum oxide and primer increased the shear bond strength of zirconia core to porcelain veneer. Thermocycling and masticatory cycles failed to reduce the shear bond strength in all the three groups significantly
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spelling doaj-art-8056bb330eec4cc5aff9e73e8c16cd212025-08-19T20:13:18ZengTabriz University of Medical SciencesJournal of Dental Research, Dental Clinics, Dental Prospects2008-210X2008-21182019-11-0113322723310.15171/joddd.2019.035joddd-27373Effect of thermal and mechanical cycles on shear bond strength of zirconia core to porcelain veneer under different surface treatmentsTahereh Ghaffari0Elnaz Moslehifard1Mehrnaz Motiei2Department of Prosthodontics, Faculty of Dentistry, Tabriz University of Medical Sciences, Tabriz, IranDepartment of Prosthodontics, Faculty of Dentistry, Tabriz University of Medical Sciences, Tabriz, IranDepartment of Prosthodontics, Faculty of Dentistry, Tabriz University of Medical Sciences, Tabriz, IranBackground. Due to the fragile nature of all-ceramic restorations, it is necessary to provide an appropriate (core) infrastructure to support the veneering porcelain. The veneer detachment and chipping are disadvantages of these restorations. Several techniques have been proposed to minimize these problems. This study evaluated the effect of thermal and mechanical cycles on the shear bond strength of zirconia core to porcelain veneer under different surface treatments. Methods. Sixty disk-like zirconium samples were randomly divided into three groups. The first group was polished and veneered with porcelain, without additional surface treatments. The two other groups were subjected to different surface treatments (modified aluminum oxide by silica and activator‒aluminum oxide and primer) and veneering with porcelain. Half of the samples in each group were subjected to 6000 thermal cycles and 20,000 masticatory cycles of 50 N to imitate the intraoral conditions; the other half were placed in distilled water at 37°C until the shear strength test. Each sample was then buried using PMMA in a mounting jig so that the gap between the core and the veneer could be placed upward. Then, they were exposed to shear stress using a universal testing machine at a rate of 1 mm/min until fracture. The maximum force leading to the fracture was recorded. Results. Comparison of the groups showed that the highest shear bond strength was related to the samples treated with aluminum oxide and primer, without applying thermal and masticatory cycles, which indicated no significant difference from the group treated with aluminum oxide and primer, with thermal and masticatory cycles. The lowest shear bond strengths were related to the polished samples without surface treatment by applying thermal and masticatory cycles (P=0.001), which indicated no significant difference from the untreated group without thermal and masticatory cycles. Conclusion. Based on the results, treatment with aluminum oxide and primer increased the shear bond strength of zirconia core to porcelain veneer. Thermocycling and masticatory cycles failed to reduce the shear bond strength in all the three groups significantlyhttps://joddd.tbzmed.ac.ir/PDF/joddd-27373air abrasionmechanical cycleporcelain veneerthermal cyclezirconia
spellingShingle Tahereh Ghaffari
Elnaz Moslehifard
Mehrnaz Motiei
Effect of thermal and mechanical cycles on shear bond strength of zirconia core to porcelain veneer under different surface treatments
air abrasion
mechanical cycle
porcelain veneer
thermal cycle
zirconia
title Effect of thermal and mechanical cycles on shear bond strength of zirconia core to porcelain veneer under different surface treatments
title_full Effect of thermal and mechanical cycles on shear bond strength of zirconia core to porcelain veneer under different surface treatments
title_fullStr Effect of thermal and mechanical cycles on shear bond strength of zirconia core to porcelain veneer under different surface treatments
title_full_unstemmed Effect of thermal and mechanical cycles on shear bond strength of zirconia core to porcelain veneer under different surface treatments
title_short Effect of thermal and mechanical cycles on shear bond strength of zirconia core to porcelain veneer under different surface treatments
title_sort effect of thermal and mechanical cycles on shear bond strength of zirconia core to porcelain veneer under different surface treatments
topic air abrasion
mechanical cycle
porcelain veneer
thermal cycle
zirconia
url https://joddd.tbzmed.ac.ir/PDF/joddd-27373
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