Phosphoric Acid Modified With Polyphenol-Rich Plant Extracts: Bond Strength to Sound and Eroded Dentin
Thiago Saads Carvalho, Tommy Baumann, Mohamed Ahmed Said Zayed, Alessandro D. Loguercio, Anne Peutzfeldt, Samira Helena Niemeyer

TL;DR
This study tests modified phosphoric acid with plant extracts to improve bonding strength to healthy and eroded dentin over time.
Contribution
The novelty is modifying phosphoric acid with polyphenol-rich plant extracts to enhance dental bonding durability.
Findings
Modified phosphoric acids showed higher immediate bond strength than commercial controls.
Long-term bond strength remained stable for modified acids but decreased for commercial controls.
Blueberry and grape seed extracts performed well on eroded dentin after one year.
Abstract
To modify phosphoric acid (PA) with polyphenol-rich plant extracts and verify their effect on immediate (24 h) and long-term (1 year) micro-shear bond strength (µSBS) of an adhesive system to sound and eroded dentin. 420 dentin specimens (360 for µSBS and 60 for characterization) were prepared and divided into two substrate-subgroups: sound (untreated) and eroded dentin (underwent 10 cycles of 1 h exposure to human saliva and 5 min immersion in citric acid). The specimens from each subgroup were randomly distributed into six groups, according to PA (n = 30/group): PA-EXP (experimental control), PA-GSE (PA-EXP + grape seed extract), PA-BLU (PA-EXP + blueberry extract), PA-CRA (PA-EXP + cranberry extract), PA-GRE (PA-EXP + green tea extract), PA-COM (commercial control). After etching with the respective PA (15 s), specimens were restored with adhesive and composite resin. Half of the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDental Trauma and Treatments
