Bending Strength of Intact and Repaired Denture Base Resins
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.3109/00016358309162322Keywords:
Mechanical properties, acrylic repairs, PMMAAbstract
Results of bending strength and deflection at fracture of intact and repaired denture base resin specimens were obtained. Both heat-cured and cold-cured resins of two different products were used. After storage in distilled water at 37°C for 1 month, some of the intact heat-cured specimens were dried in air at 21 ± 1°C for 24 h before testing. This induced a lowering of the bending strength. There was no difference in strength between the two products. However, the intact heat-cured specimens of SR 3/60 showed higher results of deflection at fracture than Vertex. Repaired specimens had a bending strength between 42.9% and 61.2% compared with the intact heat-cured specimens tested immediately after storage in water. The repair performed with the low-viscosity self-cured resin resulted in higher bending strength values than when using repair material with the higher initial viscosity. Drying the broken heat-cured specimens for 24 h at 21 ± 1 °C before the repair and painting with monomer liquid on the fractured surfaces of the heat-cured resin was without effect on the bending strength of the repaired specimens.
Acta Odontologica Scandinavica publishes original research papers as well as critical reviews relevant to the diagnosis, epidemiology, health service, prevention, aetiology, pathogenesis, pathology, physiology, microbiology, development and treatment of diseases affecting tissues of the oral cavity and associated structures including papers on cause and effect or explanatory/associative relationships for experimental or observational studies.