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Original Article

Microleakage of indirect composite inlays: An in vitro comparison with the direct technique

Pages 295-301 | Received 17 Feb 1992, Published online: 02 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Microleakage occurring around directly and indirectly made class-II composite restorations was evaluated on extracted human premolars. Before the evaluation was made, the teeth were thermocycled and stained with an organic dye. Direct class-II composite restorations demonstrated extensive microleakage at their dentin cavosurface margins. Indirect class-II composite inlays luted with a dual-curing composite cement displayed much less microleakage than restorations made using the direct technique. The use of glass-ionomer cement rather than composite cement as the luting material resulted in more microleakage. Rather than being a true microleakage, the leakage of glass-ionomer cement might be the result of a diffusion of the water-soluble organic dye in the water-based cement. The results suggest that the indirect composite technique is superior to the direct technique when it comes to reducing microleakage. □ Dental composites; inlays; in vitro smdy; microleakage

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