Vertaisarvioitu katsausartikkeli tieteellisessä aikakauslehdessä (A2)

Can Specular Gloss Measurements Predict the Effectiveness of Finishing/Polishing Protocols in Dental Polymers? A Systematic Review and Linear Mixed-effects Prediction Model




Julkaisun tekijätde Melo Teresa Pinheiro, Delgado Antonio HS, Martins Rui, Lassila Lippo, Garoushi Sufyan, Caldeira Jorge, Azul Ana Mano, Vallittu Pekka

Julkaisuvuosi2022

JournalOperative Dentistry

Volyymi47

Julkaisunumero3

AloitussivuE131

Lopetussivun numeroE151

DOIhttp://dx.doi.org/10.2341/21-027-LIT


Tiivistelmä

Purpose: The current gold standard measure to assess polishing efficacy is surface roughness (SR) assessed in laboratory research. Specular gloss (SG) has been negatively correlated to SR, which raises the following question: Can SG be used to accurately determine the effectiveness of a finishing/polishing procedure in direct resin composites?

Methods: A systematic approach and search strategy, following Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-analysis (PRISMA) guidelines, was developed and conducted in five electronic databases: PubMed/Medline, Scopus, Web of Science, EMBASE (Ovid), and SciELO/LILACS to identify laboratory studies that assessed SR and SG, simultaneously, of resin composites, without date or language restriction. Risk of bias assessment was carried out by two reviewers, independently. From the extracted quantitative data of SG/SR, regression analyses were performed, and a linear mixed-effects prediction model was derived using the nimble package in R (v4.0.3).

Results: A total of 928 potential studies were found, out of which, 13 were eligible after criterion screening. Experimental groups featured 31 resin composites of six different filler types, with the most common being microhybrids followed by nanohybrids. More than half of the studies initially reported a linear correlation between SR and SG, which ranged from r2 = 0.34-0.96. Taking into account the regression analysis and prediction model posteriorly performed, the corresponding SG threshold for 0.2 μm is estimated to be >55 GU. Most of the evidence was classified as moderate or high risk of bias.

Conclusion: SG is universally correlated to SR in polymers, and a reference value of >55 GU is proposed, above which samples are considered well polished.


Last updated on 2023-15-06 at 16:05