Abstract
Data for the color stability of dual-polymerized and light-polymerized resin cements used in esthetic dentistry are lacking.
The purpose of this in vitro study was to evaluate the color stability of 4 types of composite resin cements after water aging.
Specimens (n=30) of each resin cement (Variolink Esthetic LC, RelyX Ultimate DC, Nexus 3 DC, Nexus 3 LC) were prepared. The shade selected was Light+ for Variolink Esthetic, B 0.5 for RelyX Ultimate, and White for both Nexus 3 DC and LC. All 120 specimens were aged by water for 30 days at 37°C under dark conditions, using a thermocycling machine. The specimens’ color characteristics (L*, luminosity; a*, red-green; b*, yellow-blue) and color differences (ΔE) were measured with a spectrophotometer before day 0, after day 1, and after 30 days of immersion. Statistical analysis used ANOVA and Tukey post hoc tests (α=.05).
Considering ΔE<3.3 as clinically acceptable, results showed significant color variations for all cements (RelyX Ultimate=3.69; Nexus 3 LC=3.76; Nexus 3 DC=5.34), except for Variolink Esthetic (0.88). However, this variation was significantly less when day 1 was considered the baseline measurement, showing clinically acceptable ΔE values for all types of cement.
Water aging had a significant effect on color stability; most color variations occurred in the first 24 hours of polymerization, with relatively nonsignificant variations afterwards.