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Related Experiment Videos

Do dentin bond strength tests serve a useful purpose?

S Sudsangiam1, R van Noort

  • 1Department of Restorative Dentistry, University of Sheffield, Claremont Crescent, Sheffield S10 2TA, United Kingdom.

The Journal of Adhesive Dentistry
|December 1, 2001
PubMed
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Dentin bond strength tests often fail to predict clinical performance due to fundamental flaws. Clinically based evidence is currently the most reliable method for selecting dentin bonding agents.

Area of Science:

  • Dental Materials Science
  • Biomaterials Research

Background:

  • Extensive research exists on dentin bond strength.
  • Numerous new dentin bonding agents are continuously introduced to the market.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To critically assess the utility of published dentin bond strength data.
  • To evaluate the predictive value of current dentin bonding strength measurement techniques.

Main Methods:

  • Examination of limitations in current dentin bond strength testing methodologies.
  • Review of existing scientific literature on dentin bonding agents.

Main Results:

  • Dentin bond strength measurements are inconsistent predictors of clinical performance.
  • Significant flaws identified in popular dentin bonding strength test methods.

Related Experiment Videos

  • Lack of reliable methodologies to correlate laboratory bond strength data with clinical outcomes.
  • Conclusions:

    • Clinically based evidence is the sole dependable source for selecting dentin bonding agents.
    • Need for development of alternative, more reliable testing approaches.