Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1422480 Dental Materials 2009 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

ObjectivesIt was hypothesized that the coronal cementum containing collagen forms a weak junction with enamel unlike the well integrated DEJ and CDJ.MethodsThe hypothesis was investigated in two parts: (1) evaluate the structure, chemical composition and mechanical properties of coronal cementum and its junction with enamel using scanning electron microscopy, micro-X-ray computed tomography, and atomic force microscopy. The chemical composition and mechanical properties were determined by evaluating the spatial variations of inorganic (PO43−ν1 mode at 960 cm−1) and organic (C–H deformation at 1452 cm−1; C–H stretch at 2940 cm−1) contents using Raman microspectroscopy and elastic modulus and hardness values using nanoindentation. (2) Estimate the strength and evaluate the microstructure of coronal cementum interface with enamel using SEM and MicroXCT™.Results and conclusionsCoronal cementum is heterogeneous because it is a combination of laminar acellular afibrillar cementum and acellular extrinsic fiber cementum with relatively higher organic content. It integrates micromechanically via a scallop-like weak interface with enamel unlike the biomechanically efficient DEJ and CDJ and is continuous with primary root cementum. A single tooth could exhibit all three types of cementum enamel junctions; an overlap, butt and a gap depending on the sectioning plane. The elastic modulus of coronal cementum (11.0 ± 5.8 GPa) is significantly lower (p < 0.05; Student's t-test with 95% confidence interval) than primary cementum (15.8 ± 5.3 GPa).

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Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Biomaterials
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