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Comparative evaluation of the tensile bond strength of two silicone based denture liners with denture base resins.
Mittal, Manish; Anil Kumar, S; Sandhu, H S; Iyer, Satish R; Ahuja, Ratandeep S.
  • Mittal M; Graded Specialist (Prosthodontics), Command Military Dental Centre (Central Command), Lucknow, India.
  • Anil Kumar S; Graded Specialist (Prosthodontics), Command Military Dental Centre (Central Command), Lucknow, India.
  • Sandhu HS; Professor & Senior Specialist (Prosthodontics), O/O DGDS, IHQ Min of Def, New Delhi, India.
  • Iyer SR; Professor & Senior Specialist (Prosthodontics), Command Military Dental Centre (Southern Command), Pune, India.
  • Ahuja RS; Graded Specialist (Prosthodontics), Command Military Dental Centre (Northern Command), Udhampur, India.
Med J Armed Forces India ; 72(3): 258-64, 2016 Jul.
Article en En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27546966
ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND:

To evaluate and compare tensile bond strength of two silicone based liners with heat cure and heat cure high impact denture base resin at baseline and after storage in artificial saliva for 30 and 60 days.

METHOD:

Heat cure conventional and high impact acrylic blocks (120 blocks each) prepared with final test specimen of two blocks of each resin with a liner. The baseline samples and those tested after 30 and 60 days interval stored in artificial saliva in thermal incubator, all were pulled apart in UTM at 20 mm/min. The tensile bond strength and mode of failure (adhesive/cohesive) were assessed. Mean, SD determined and analysis using one way ANOVA and paired 't' test.

RESULTS:

The highest mean tensile bond strength (1.028 MPa) and the least i.e. 0.289 MPa was observed with Permaflex silicone liner against heat cure PMMA after storage in artificial saliva at 37 ± 1 °C.

CONCLUSION:

The study rejected the null hypothesis because storage time in artificial saliva affected the bond strength of the resilient liners examined. The results revealed a statistically significant difference (p < 0.05) of artificial saliva storage on the bond strength of both the liners. After storage in artificial saliva for 30 days and 60 days at 37 ± 1 °C, all the specimens showed a significant reduction in the tensile bond strength.
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