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Purpose: The objective of this study was to verify the influence of resin cement
polymerization mode and early cyclic loading on the bond strength of porcelain-dentin
specimens. Materials and Methods: Two cementation systems, Choice/One-Step and RelyX
ARC/Single Bond, were tested. Porcelain truncated cones were bonded into cavities
prepared in sections of bovine root dentin. Each system was tested with the resin cement in
dual-cure and self-cure mode (with and without photoactivation, respectively). Half of the
specimens were load cycled 15 minutes after cement mixing (60 N, 20 times). The other
half were not submitted to mechanical loading (control). After 24-hour storage in distilled
water (37°C), the extrusion shear test was performed. Data were analyzed by three-way
ANOVA. Results: With both systems, some specimens built with the cement in self-cure
mode debonded during cyclic loading (RelyX ARC/Single Bond 47%; Choice/One-Step
13%). No significant system effects were detected. Mean bond strength under the dual-cure
mode (13.4 MPa, SD 3.6) was significantly higher than the corresponding mean for the selfcured
specimens (5.7 MPa, SD 2.6). No reduction in bond strength was observed for the
specimens that survived the early cyclic loading. Conclusion: Resin cements in dual-cure
mode presented higher bond strengths than self-cured materials. Early load cycling caused
debonding of some self-cured specimens. However, the bond strength of the survivor
specimens was not affected by load cycling. Int J Prosthodont 2003;16:145–149.
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