Laboratory strength of glass ionomer and zinc phosphate cements |
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Authors: | Andree Piwowarczyk Dr med dent Peter Ottl Dr med dent Hans-Christoph Lauer Dr med dent |
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Affiliation: | Department of Prosthetic Dentistry, School of Dentistry, Johann Wolfgang Goethe University, Frankfurt, Germany. piwowarczyk@t-online.de |
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Abstract: | PURPOSE: The present in vitro study examined 3 mechanical properties, namely compressive, flexural, and diametral tensile strength, of various commercially available cements and core materials as a function of time after mixing. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The examined materials were 2 cermet cements (Ketac Silver [ESPE, Seefeld, Germany] and Chelon Silver [ESPE]), 1 metal-reinforced glass ionomer cement (Miracle Mix [GC Dental Industrial Corp, Tokyo, Japan]), 2 conventional glass ionomer cements (Ketac Bond [ESPE] and Ketac Cem [ESPE]), 1 standard cure zinc phosphate cement (Harvard Cement [Richter and Hoffmann, Berlin, Germany]), and 1 zinc phosphate cement with the addition of 30% silver amalgam alloy powder (Harvard Cement 70% with Dispersalloy 30% [Richter and Hoffmann/Johnson and Johnson, East Windsor, NJ]). Properties were measured using a universal testing machine at 15 minutes, 1 hour, and 24 hours after first mixing. RESULTS: Compressive strengths varied widely between the 3 times of measurement from 5.8 +/- 6.6 MPa for Ketac Cem to 144.3 +/- 10.2 MPa for Ketac Silver. Twenty-four hours after mixing, the Bonferroni test showed significant (p
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Keywords: | core restoration mechanical properties compressive strength flexural strength diametral tensile strength |
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