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  lüll The mechanical properties of human dentin: a critical review and re-evaluation of  the dental literature Kinney JH; Marshall SJ; Marshall GWCrit Rev Oral Biol Med  2003[]; 14 (1): 13-29The past 50 years of research on the mechanical properties of human dentin are  reviewed. Since the body of work in this field is highly inconsistent, it was  often necessary to re-analyze prior studies, when possible, and to re-assess them  within the framework of composite mechanics and dentin structure. A critical  re-evaluation of the literature indicates that the magnitudes of the elastic  constants of dentin must be revised considerably upward. The Young's and shear  moduli lie between 20-25 GPa and 7-10 GPa, respectively. Viscoelastic behavior  (time-dependent stress relaxation) measurably reduces these values at strain  rates of physiological relevance; the reduced modulus (infinite relaxation time)  is about 12 GPa. Furthermore, it appears as if the elastic properties are  anisotropic (not the same in all directions); sonic methods detect hexagonal  anisotropy, although its magnitude appears to be small. Strength data are  re-interpreted within the framework of the Weibull distribution function. The  large coefficients of variation cited in all strength studies can then be  understood in terms of a distribution of flaws within the dentin specimens. The  apparent size-effect in the tensile and shear strength data has its origins in  this flaw distribution, and can be quantified by the Weibull analysis. Finally,  the relatively few fracture mechanics and fatigue studies are discussed. Dentin  has a fatigue limit. For stresses smaller than the normal stresses of  mastication, approximately 30 MPa, a flaw-free dentin specimen apparently will  not fail. However, a more conservative approach based on fatigue crack growth  rates indicates that if there is a pre-existing flaw of sufficient size  (approximately 0.3-1.0 mm), it can grow to catastrophic proportion with cyclic  loading at stresses below 30 MPa.|Biomechanical Phenomena[MESH]|Collagen Type I[MESH]|Compressive Strength[MESH]|Crystallography[MESH]|Dental Stress Analysis[MESH]|Dentin/*chemistry/*physiology[MESH]|Elasticity[MESH]|Hardness[MESH]|Humans[MESH]|Shear Strength[MESH]|Stress, Mechanical[MESH]|Survival Analysis[MESH]|Tensile Strength[MESH]|Viscosity[MESH] |