Comparative study of direct and indirect composite veneers in terms of marginal gap and microleakage / Lim Yee Ping
Objectives To evaluate the microleakage and marginal gap at cervical and incisal margin of direct and indirect composite veneers. Materials and method: Forty-four extracted human maxillary central incisors (n=44) used for the study were chosen based on the inclusion and exclusion criteria. They...
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| 格式: | Thesis |
| 出版: |
2019
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| 主题: |
| _version_ | 1849735321666715648 |
|---|---|
| author | Lim, Yee Ping |
| author_facet | Lim, Yee Ping |
| author_sort | Lim, Yee Ping |
| description | Objectives
To evaluate the microleakage and marginal gap at cervical and incisal margin of direct
and indirect composite veneers.
Materials and method:
Forty-four extracted human maxillary central incisors (n=44) used for the study were
chosen based on the inclusion and exclusion criteria. They were randomly divided into
two groups. Group 1: Shofu Beautifil™ direct composite (Shofu Inc. Kyoto, Japan) and
Group 2: Shofu Ceramage™ indirect composite (Shofu Inc. Kyoto, Japan). Putty index
for each tooth was taken before it was subjected to preparation for veneer restorations.
The manufacturer’s instructions for handling and application procedures for both
materials were strictly followed. All the samples were stored under water for 24 hours at
37 ° C, then subjected to thermo-cycling (500 cycles at the temperature between 5° and
55° C for 60 seconds in water baths (according to ISO 11450).
Upon completion of artificial ageing, the entire external surface of the restoration and the
supporting crown and root excluding the margins of the veneers were coated with two
layers of nail varnish before being immersed in 2% basic fuschine dye for 24 hours. All
the specimens were mounted in acrylic resin and sectioned labio-palatally at the middle
of the restorations. Each half of the sectioned specimens for both direct and indirect
composite veneers were observed under a stereomicroscope (×40 magnifications) and the
degrees of dye penetration at the cervical and incisal margins were measured in
micrometers (µm). Marginal gaps were measured at the cervical and incisal areas by
viewing the specimens under stereomicroscope OLYMPUS™ (40X) for both the groups
and the reading were measured in micrometers (µm) by one assessor. To control the
iv
reproducibility of the scoring system and the intra-examiner performance, the samples
(n=44) were measured again one month after initial measurement. The reproducibility
was tested using intraclass correlation coefficient. Mann-Whitney Test was used to
determine any significant differences in microleakage and marginal gap of direct and
indirect composite veneer. Wilcoxon Signed Rank test was used to evaluate intragroup
differences for microleakage and marginal gap at the cervical and incisal margins for both
the groups. Spearman’s correlation test was used to correlate the association of
microleakage and marginal gap at the cervical and incisal margins of direct and indirect
composite veneers (p>0.05).
Results
Mann-Whitney U test revealed that direct composite veneers demonstrated
significantly lower microleakage and marginal gap at cervical and incisal area when
compared to indirect composite veneers (p< 0.001). Wilcoxon signed rank test showed
that there were no significant intragroup differences for microleakage and marginal gap
at cervical and incisal margins for both direct and indirect composite veneers (p< 0.05).
Spearman correlation test revealed that there was a positive correlation between marginal
gap and microleakage at the cervical and incisal portion of the direct and indirect
composite veneers and the tooth structures (p< 0.001).
Conclusion:
Within the limitation of this study, direct composite veneers Beautifil™ (Shofu Inc.
Kyoto, Japan) shown to be superior than the indirect composite veneers, Ceramage™
(Shofu Inc. Kyoto, Japan) by means of less marginal gaps and microleakage. There was
a direct correlation between the existence of marginal gaps and microleakage, when there
v
was less marginal gap between tooth-restoration interface there was less microleakage.
Key words: composite veneer, microleakage, marginal gap. |
| format | Thesis |
| id | oai:studentsrepo.um.edu.my:11197 |
| institution | Universiti Malaya |
| publishDate | 2019 |
| record_format | eprints |
| spelling | oai:studentsrepo.um.edu.my:111972022-01-03T19:13:10Z Comparative study of direct and indirect composite veneers in terms of marginal gap and microleakage / Lim Yee Ping Lim, Yee Ping RK Dentistry Objectives To evaluate the microleakage and marginal gap at cervical and incisal margin of direct and indirect composite veneers. Materials and method: Forty-four extracted human maxillary central incisors (n=44) used for the study were chosen based on the inclusion and exclusion criteria. They were randomly divided into two groups. Group 1: Shofu Beautifil™ direct composite (Shofu Inc. Kyoto, Japan) and Group 2: Shofu Ceramage™ indirect composite (Shofu Inc. Kyoto, Japan). Putty index for each tooth was taken before it was subjected to preparation for veneer restorations. The manufacturer’s instructions for handling and application procedures for both materials were strictly followed. All the samples were stored under water for 24 hours at 37 ° C, then subjected to thermo-cycling (500 cycles at the temperature between 5° and 55° C for 60 seconds in water baths (according to ISO 11450). Upon completion of artificial ageing, the entire external surface of the restoration and the supporting crown and root excluding the margins of the veneers were coated with two layers of nail varnish before being immersed in 2% basic fuschine dye for 24 hours. All the specimens were mounted in acrylic resin and sectioned labio-palatally at the middle of the restorations. Each half of the sectioned specimens for both direct and indirect composite veneers were observed under a stereomicroscope (×40 magnifications) and the degrees of dye penetration at the cervical and incisal margins were measured in micrometers (µm). Marginal gaps were measured at the cervical and incisal areas by viewing the specimens under stereomicroscope OLYMPUS™ (40X) for both the groups and the reading were measured in micrometers (µm) by one assessor. To control the iv reproducibility of the scoring system and the intra-examiner performance, the samples (n=44) were measured again one month after initial measurement. The reproducibility was tested using intraclass correlation coefficient. Mann-Whitney Test was used to determine any significant differences in microleakage and marginal gap of direct and indirect composite veneer. Wilcoxon Signed Rank test was used to evaluate intragroup differences for microleakage and marginal gap at the cervical and incisal margins for both the groups. Spearman’s correlation test was used to correlate the association of microleakage and marginal gap at the cervical and incisal margins of direct and indirect composite veneers (p>0.05). Results Mann-Whitney U test revealed that direct composite veneers demonstrated significantly lower microleakage and marginal gap at cervical and incisal area when compared to indirect composite veneers (p< 0.001). Wilcoxon signed rank test showed that there were no significant intragroup differences for microleakage and marginal gap at cervical and incisal margins for both direct and indirect composite veneers (p< 0.05). Spearman correlation test revealed that there was a positive correlation between marginal gap and microleakage at the cervical and incisal portion of the direct and indirect composite veneers and the tooth structures (p< 0.001). Conclusion: Within the limitation of this study, direct composite veneers Beautifil™ (Shofu Inc. Kyoto, Japan) shown to be superior than the indirect composite veneers, Ceramage™ (Shofu Inc. Kyoto, Japan) by means of less marginal gaps and microleakage. There was a direct correlation between the existence of marginal gaps and microleakage, when there v was less marginal gap between tooth-restoration interface there was less microleakage. Key words: composite veneer, microleakage, marginal gap. 2019 Thesis NonPeerReviewed application/pdf http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/11197/4/yee_ping.pdf Lim, Yee Ping (2019) Comparative study of direct and indirect composite veneers in terms of marginal gap and microleakage / Lim Yee Ping. Masters thesis, Universiti Malaya. http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/11197/ |
| spellingShingle | RK Dentistry Lim, Yee Ping Comparative study of direct and indirect composite veneers in terms of marginal gap and microleakage / Lim Yee Ping |
| title | Comparative study of direct and indirect composite veneers in terms of marginal gap and microleakage / Lim Yee Ping |
| title_full | Comparative study of direct and indirect composite veneers in terms of marginal gap and microleakage / Lim Yee Ping |
| title_fullStr | Comparative study of direct and indirect composite veneers in terms of marginal gap and microleakage / Lim Yee Ping |
| title_full_unstemmed | Comparative study of direct and indirect composite veneers in terms of marginal gap and microleakage / Lim Yee Ping |
| title_short | Comparative study of direct and indirect composite veneers in terms of marginal gap and microleakage / Lim Yee Ping |
| title_sort | comparative study of direct and indirect composite veneers in terms of marginal gap and microleakage lim yee ping |
| topic | RK Dentistry |
| url-record | http://studentsrepo.um.edu.my/11197/ |
| work_keys_str_mv | AT limyeeping comparativestudyofdirectandindirectcompositeveneersintermsofmarginalgapandmicroleakagelimyeeping |