# Bond strength between acrylic resin and artificial tooth treated with experimental silane with thio-urethane

**Authors:** Leonardo Guimarães Sonehara, Carmem Silvia Pfeifer, Ana Paula Piovezan Fugolin, Mario Alexandre Coelho Sinhoreti, Rafael Leonardo Xediek Consani

PMC · DOI: 10.1590/0103-644020256136 · Brazilian Dental Journal · 2025-04-14

## TL;DR

This study tested how different treatments affect the bond strength between artificial teeth and acrylic resin used in dentures.

## Contribution

The study introduces an experimental silane with thio-urethane and evaluates its bonding performance with acrylic resin.

## Key findings

- JAT+PS showed the highest bond strength, followed by ABR+ES.
- CON and JAT+ES had the lowest bond strength values.
- The experimental silane with thio-urethane showed variable performance depending on the treatment method.

## Abstract

This in vitro study evaluated the bond strength between thermo-activated acrylic resin and artificial tooth treated with experimental silane incorporated with thio-urethane. Artificial molar teeth were individually fixed in 50mm long cylindrical wax sticks and traditionally included in metal flasks with type III plaster coated with laboratory silicone. The tooth/wax sets were removed from the flask, the tooth separated from the wax stick, and the fitting area was cleaned with household detergent. Teeth were separated into three groups according to fitting area treatments (n=10): CON (Control, no treatment or silane application), ABR (Abrasion with diamond tip), and JAT (Blasting with 50μm aluminum oxide particles). Tooth fitting area treatment was associated with PALABOND commercial silane application (PS) or experimental silane incorporated with thio-urethane (ES). Teeth were replaced in the plaster mold, and the acrylic resin traditionally flask pressed and polymerized in a heated water bath. Tooth/resin sets were individually fixed in rigid PVC tubes with chemically activated acrylic resin, leaving a space of 1 mm between the tooth/PVC tube top, and submitted to the shear strength test in a universal test machine. Shear strength data were evaluated for normality, and subjected to one-way ANOVA and Tukey's test (5%). JAT+PS showed greater strength followed by ABR+ES. CON and JAT+ES showed lowest values and ABR+PS was intermediate. In conclusion, the artificial teeth treatments with experimental silane incorporated with thio-urethane associated with blasting or abrasion promoted different strength values when bonded to acrylic resin for denture base.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** thio-urethane (PubChem CID 3032339), acrylic resin (PubChem CID 6581), aluminum oxide (PubChem CID 9989226)

## Full text

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## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11996154/full.md

## References

32 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11996154/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11996154