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Endodontic Materials in Clinical Practice


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whilst light‐cured materials are strong and insensitive, surely we can do both? No. Firstly, the one function replaces the other: in a given volume, something has to go to make space for something else. All too often, ‘additions’ are made that are not recognized as the replacements they are. Given that, something must be diminished even if something is gained. Secondly, by including competing reactions that have no chemistry in common, the trade‐off depends on the relative rates and timings: it is a very fine balance, the probability of attaining which is low [17]. This is a complicated and messy system that falls between two stools. It is well recognized that ‘compomers’, where a GIC‐type glass was used as the core in a resin matrix, failed to work as hoped [13, 18] – so why now do we see supposedly light‐cured hydraulic silicate cement? Similar arguments apply, similar outcomes are to be expected. The triumph of advertising over substance? Wishful thinking is the bane of dentistry.

      We see similar failures of appreciation in the seemingly random selections of additives regularly studied and proposed for many applications. For example, a material is too weak for a certain use, but a strong material is known that can be made as a powder – why not add this? Again, the replacement aspect of such a design is not recognized, but a key requirement of such composite structures is missing: bonding. Composite structures require a bond – that is, a chemical bond – between the matrix and the core (alias the ‘filler’, a term that betrays a less than honourable economic incentive in some contexts) for stress transfer to occur and the benefit to be realized. This is ‘matrix constraint’. With it, there are remarkable improvements. Without it, the material behaves as if it were full of holes, with the obvious outcome. This was seen in the attempts to strengthen silver amalgam with (silver‐plated!) sapphire whiskers, GIC with zirconia powder, and GIC with amalgam alloy powder (‘miracle mix’) to name but three egregious examples. Now we have ‘microsilica’ added to HSC. In fact, we should be careful to distinguish between materials that are included to do a job – such as reactants or bonded core – and those that have no other purpose than to dilute the system, which is all a true filler actually is. Of course, the inclusion of pharmaceutically active substances such as antimicrobials must also be treated rationally, because they are then part of the matrix (occupying volume) and therefore affect all its properties, always – poor discriminatory power experiments notwithstanding.

      Whether or not a radio‐opacifier is added to any of these does not affect the fundamental behaviour: the essential chemistry – hydraulic reaction – remains as the defining characteristic, whether or not that additive modifies the setting reaction rate or outcome in any way (whether deliberately or accidentally, and no matter how drastically) [20]. Indeed, whether any other additive is included or the formulation is tweaked for any reason (e.g. rate modification), the basic classification must remain if the key chemistry persists. Attempts to create ‘generations’ on a historical basis are as pointless as they are uninformative in the absence of logic, consistency, and relevance. There are no alternatives known at present for true HSCs, all of which are essentially based on CSs (as stressed elsewhere in this book).

      The trouble is that what may reasonably be called ‘fake HSCs’ are also offered. Along the lines of compomer (v.s.), a PC material powder in a light‐cured resin matrix has been produced: this is a filled (composite) resin (FR), no more, no less. It is simply irrational, and highly misleading (if not culpably misrepresented), to call this an HSC, or to imply that it is by association, irrespective of any beneficial effects, perceived or claimed, from a high pH at the surface, available calcium, and so on. If setting does not depend on water, it is not an HSC. In fact, water that does diffuse into the cured material (through the matrix, as is normal and expected for such resin systems, despite popular belief) must react with the PC material: such chemistry is unavoidable. Thus, one could reasonably expect this to expand (reaction product volume is necessarily greater than PC volume), with perhaps unfortunate results, albeit slowly – but this is not ‘setting’. Similarly, a PC‐ or CS‐containing material to be mixed with a salicylate‐containing second paste, setting by the usual acid–base (AB), salt‐formation process of many other proper cementitious materials, and not in the first place by reaction with water, cannot