Abstract

Cinnamon essential oil (CEO) has antibacterial properties, but its ability to suppress the formation of multi-species oral biofilms has not been fully elucidated. This study evaluated the antibacterial and antibiofilm activities of cinnamon essential oil nanoemulsion (CEON) against oral biofilms formed using a microcosm biofilm model. The biofilms were formed on bovine enamel specimens over a 7-day period, during which all specimens were treated with one of three solutions: 5% CEON (n = 35), 0.5% cocamidopropyl betaine (n = 35), or 0.12% chlorhexidine gluconate (CHX; n = 35). Antibacterial and antibiofilm activities were determined by the red/green ratios (R/G values) of 7-day-old mature biofilms photographed with quantitative light-induced fluorescence-digital, the number of aciduric bacterial colony-forming units (CFUs) within each biofilm, and the absorbance of bacterial suspensions. One-way and repeated-measures analysis of variance were performed to compare differences among the three solutions. R/G values were lowest in the 0.12% CHX group, but not significantly differ from the 5% CEON group. The number of CFUs and absorbance were lowest in the 5% CEON group. This study showed that nanoemulsified CEO inhibited the maturation of multi-species oral biofilms and the growth of oral microorganisms in biofilms, including aciduric bacteria that cause dental caries.

Highlights

  • Cinnamon essential oil (CEO) has antibacterial properties, but its ability to suppress the formation of multi-species oral biofilms has not been fully elucidated

  • The R/G values of 7-day-old mature biofilms were lowest in the 0.12% chlorhexidine gluconate (CHX) group (0.87 ± 0.09), followed by the 5% cinnamon essential oil nanoemulsion (CEON) group (0.91 ± 0.10) and the 0.5% CB group (1.18 ± 0.07) (p < 0.001)

  • There was no significant difference in R/G values between the 5% CEON and 0.12% CHX groups (p > 0.05)

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Summary

Introduction

Cinnamon essential oil (CEO) has antibacterial properties, but its ability to suppress the formation of multi-species oral biofilms has not been fully elucidated. This study evaluated the antibacterial and antibiofilm activities of cinnamon essential oil nanoemulsion (CEON) against oral biofilms formed using a microcosm biofilm model. This study showed that nanoemulsified CEO inhibited the maturation of multispecies oral biofilms and the growth of oral microorganisms in biofilms, including aciduric bacteria that cause dental caries. CEO reportedly exhibits antibacterial effects against a wide array of pathogenic oral bacteria, more information is needed regarding whether it can sufficiently suppress the formation of multi-species biofilms, which is essential for the prevention of oral diseases. There has been minimal research regarding the ability of CEO to inhibit multi-species biofilms present in the oral cavity

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