Thermocycling Stain Challenge and Colour Stability of two Current Zirconium Silicate-filled Indirect Composite Restorative Materials

Aim: This study compares the colour stability of two zirconium silicate-filled indirect composite materials CM and its improved formulation CMD using an in vitro thermocycling stain challenge model with 2 immersion solutions. The rationale of the thermocycling stain challenge model is to replicate t...

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Published in:Open Dentistry Journal
Main Author: Kassim Z.H.M.; Anuar M.A.F.; Ramli S.; Ismail I.H.; De Angelis N.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Bentham Science Publishers 2023
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85168122221&doi=10.2174%2f18742106-v17-e230510-2022-169&partnerID=40&md5=310d89b233e3bd060a95c06b9b16bfe5
id 2-s2.0-85168122221
spelling 2-s2.0-85168122221
Kassim Z.H.M.; Anuar M.A.F.; Ramli S.; Ismail I.H.; De Angelis N.
Thermocycling Stain Challenge and Colour Stability of two Current Zirconium Silicate-filled Indirect Composite Restorative Materials
2023
Open Dentistry Journal
17

10.2174/18742106-v17-e230510-2022-169
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85168122221&doi=10.2174%2f18742106-v17-e230510-2022-169&partnerID=40&md5=310d89b233e3bd060a95c06b9b16bfe5
Aim: This study compares the colour stability of two zirconium silicate-filled indirect composite materials CM and its improved formulation CMD using an in vitro thermocycling stain challenge model with 2 immersion solutions. The rationale of the thermocycling stain challenge model is to replicate the intraoral conditions that the indirect composite materials may be exposed to during a clinical service, water or saliva absorption and cyclical exposure to staining food colourant at varying temperature extremes. Materials and Methods: Ten discs each from shade A1 subtypes of CM and CMD indirect composites (Dentine Body A1B, Incisal 58, and Translucent HVT) were subjected to a thermocycling stain challenge following final polishing, which consisted of static immersion in 37°C of distilled water, followed by 500 thermocycles in 5°C of tea and 55°C of soy sauce and finally a 10-minute cleaning using an ultrasonic device. L*, a* and b* colour coordinates were measured, and the mean colour difference expressed as Delta E (ΔE) at different time points of the experiment were calculated and compared. Results: CM and CMD indirect composites had a significant color difference at all experimental time points (F=37.818, p<0.001). ΔE for CM subtypes and CMD subtypes in descending order, respectively, were Translucent HVT>Incisal 58>Dentin Body A1B and Incisal 58>Translucent HVT>Dentin Body A1B. Conclusion: CMD indirect composite showed improved colour stability compared to CM indirect composite. Clinical Significance: Limiting the usage of translucent shades and polishing according to the manufacturer’s recommendation may improve the overall colour of prostheses made using indirect zirconium silicate-filled composite materials. © 2023 Kassim et al.
Bentham Science Publishers
18742106
English
Article
All Open Access; Hybrid Gold Open Access
author Kassim Z.H.M.; Anuar M.A.F.; Ramli S.; Ismail I.H.; De Angelis N.
spellingShingle Kassim Z.H.M.; Anuar M.A.F.; Ramli S.; Ismail I.H.; De Angelis N.
Thermocycling Stain Challenge and Colour Stability of two Current Zirconium Silicate-filled Indirect Composite Restorative Materials
author_facet Kassim Z.H.M.; Anuar M.A.F.; Ramli S.; Ismail I.H.; De Angelis N.
author_sort Kassim Z.H.M.; Anuar M.A.F.; Ramli S.; Ismail I.H.; De Angelis N.
title Thermocycling Stain Challenge and Colour Stability of two Current Zirconium Silicate-filled Indirect Composite Restorative Materials
title_short Thermocycling Stain Challenge and Colour Stability of two Current Zirconium Silicate-filled Indirect Composite Restorative Materials
title_full Thermocycling Stain Challenge and Colour Stability of two Current Zirconium Silicate-filled Indirect Composite Restorative Materials
title_fullStr Thermocycling Stain Challenge and Colour Stability of two Current Zirconium Silicate-filled Indirect Composite Restorative Materials
title_full_unstemmed Thermocycling Stain Challenge and Colour Stability of two Current Zirconium Silicate-filled Indirect Composite Restorative Materials
title_sort Thermocycling Stain Challenge and Colour Stability of two Current Zirconium Silicate-filled Indirect Composite Restorative Materials
publishDate 2023
container_title Open Dentistry Journal
container_volume 17
container_issue
doi_str_mv 10.2174/18742106-v17-e230510-2022-169
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85168122221&doi=10.2174%2f18742106-v17-e230510-2022-169&partnerID=40&md5=310d89b233e3bd060a95c06b9b16bfe5
description Aim: This study compares the colour stability of two zirconium silicate-filled indirect composite materials CM and its improved formulation CMD using an in vitro thermocycling stain challenge model with 2 immersion solutions. The rationale of the thermocycling stain challenge model is to replicate the intraoral conditions that the indirect composite materials may be exposed to during a clinical service, water or saliva absorption and cyclical exposure to staining food colourant at varying temperature extremes. Materials and Methods: Ten discs each from shade A1 subtypes of CM and CMD indirect composites (Dentine Body A1B, Incisal 58, and Translucent HVT) were subjected to a thermocycling stain challenge following final polishing, which consisted of static immersion in 37°C of distilled water, followed by 500 thermocycles in 5°C of tea and 55°C of soy sauce and finally a 10-minute cleaning using an ultrasonic device. L*, a* and b* colour coordinates were measured, and the mean colour difference expressed as Delta E (ΔE) at different time points of the experiment were calculated and compared. Results: CM and CMD indirect composites had a significant color difference at all experimental time points (F=37.818, p<0.001). ΔE for CM subtypes and CMD subtypes in descending order, respectively, were Translucent HVT>Incisal 58>Dentin Body A1B and Incisal 58>Translucent HVT>Dentin Body A1B. Conclusion: CMD indirect composite showed improved colour stability compared to CM indirect composite. Clinical Significance: Limiting the usage of translucent shades and polishing according to the manufacturer’s recommendation may improve the overall colour of prostheses made using indirect zirconium silicate-filled composite materials. © 2023 Kassim et al.
publisher Bentham Science Publishers
issn 18742106
language English
format Article
accesstype All Open Access; Hybrid Gold Open Access
record_format scopus
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