In Vitro evaluation of microleakage of different materials used as pit-and-fissure sealants

The aim of this study was to evaluate in vitro the marginal microleakage of different materials used as pit-and-fissure sealants (Delton, Filtek Flow, Dyract Flow and Vitremer). Fifty-six extracted sound human third molars were randomly assigned to 4 groups (n=14). After sealant placement, the teeth...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Pardi,Vanessa (author)
Other Authors: Sinhoreti,Mário Alexandre Coelho (author), Pereira,Antonio Carlos (author), Ambrosano,Gláucia Maria Bovi (author), Meneghim,Marcelo de Castro (author)
Format: article
Language:eng
Published: 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0103-64402006000100011
Country:Brazil
Oai:oai:scielo:S0103-64402006000100011
Description
Summary:The aim of this study was to evaluate in vitro the marginal microleakage of different materials used as pit-and-fissure sealants (Delton, Filtek Flow, Dyract Flow and Vitremer). Fifty-six extracted sound human third molars were randomly assigned to 4 groups (n=14). After sealant placement, the teeth were thermocycled (500 cycles; 5ºC, 37ºC and 55ºC), isolated, immersed in 2% buffered methylene blue dye for 4 h, included in acrylic resin and sectioned longitudinally in a buccolingual direction. The sections were analyzed for leakage using an stereomicroscope. A 4-criteria ranked scale was used to score dye penetration. All materials exhibited dye penetration to some extension and no statistically significant difference was observed among the groups (p>0.05). In conclusion, the findings of this study showed that a flowable composite resin, a flowable compomer and resin-modified glass ionomer placed on occlusal pits and fissures had similar marginal sealing as the unfilled self-cured resin-based sealant.