Van T. Himel
Louisiana State University
12 Papers
35 Citations
Van T. Himel is an academic researcher from Louisiana State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Composite number & Bond strength. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 12 publications.
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Papers
A Comparison of Coronal Tooth Discoloration Elicited by Various Endodontic Reparative Materials
Louis J. Marconyak,Timothy C. Kirkpatrick,Howard W. Roberts,Mark D. Roberts,Arnau Aparicio,Van T. Himel,Kent A. Sabey +6 more
TL;DR: EndoSequence Root Repair Material and Biodentine produced significantly less discoloration than white Pro Root MTA, MTA Angelus, and ProRoot MTA when used in an ex vivo pulpotomy model.
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Evaluation of 4 Different Irrigating Systems for Apical Extrusion of Sodium Hypochlorite
Ross A. Yost,Brian E. Bergeron,Timothy C. Kirkpatrick,Mark D. Roberts,Howard W. Roberts,Van T. Himel,Kent A. Sabey +6 more
TL;DR: EndoVac demonstrated significantly less potential for apical extrusion than PIPS and Max-i-Probe, whereas apical preparation size did not significantly affect extrusion of irrigant.
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Effect of repeated simulated clinical use and sterilization on the cutting efficiency and flexibility of Hyflex CM nickel-titanium rotary files.
Scott T. Seago,Brian E. Bergeron,Timothy C. Kirkpatrick,Mark D. Roberts,Howard W. Roberts,Van T. Himel,Kent A. Sabey +6 more
TL;DR: Repeated simulated clinical use and sterilization of Hyflex CM rotary files showed no effect on cutting efficiency through 1 use and noEffect on flexibility through 2 uses.
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The Effects of Irrigants on the Survival of Human Stem Cells of the Apical Papilla, Including Endocyn.
Mark B. Scott,Gregory S. Zilinski,Timothy C. Kirkpatrick,Van T. Himel,Kent A. Sabey,Thomas E. Lallier +5 more
TL;DR: Endocyn was significantly less cytotoxic to PDL, UMR‐106, and SCAP cells compared with other commonly used endodontic irrigants, indicating a potential reduction in the osteogenic potential of stems cells exposed to Endocyn.
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Shear Bond Comparison between 4 Bioceramic Materials and Dual-cure Composite Resin.
Kelley A. Hursh,Timothy C. Kirkpatrick,Jared W. Cardon,John A. Brewster,Steven W. Black,Van T. Himel,Kent A. Sabey +6 more
TL;DR: The choice of which bioceramic material to use in regenerative procedures should be based on factors other than the bond between that material and the overlying coronal resin restoration, rather than typical bond strengths shown for dentin-composite resin bonding.
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