Abstract

The aim of the study was to compare surface loss values after erosion—abrasion cycles obtained with modified surface microhardness measurement (mSMH), focus variation 3D microscopy (FVM) and contact stylus profilometry (CSP). We cut human molars into buccal and lingual halves, embedded them in resin and ground 200 μm of enamel away. The resulting surfaces were polished. To maintain a reference area, we applied Block-Out resin to partly cover the enamel surface. The samples were incubated in artificial saliva (37°C; 1 h), then rinsed in deionized water (10 s) and dried with oil-free air (5 s). We immersed the specimens individually in 30 mL citric acid (1%, pH 3.6) for 2 min (25°C, 70 rpm dynamic conditions) before brushing them (50 strokes, 200 g) in an automatic brushing machine with toothpaste-slurry. We calculated the surface loss as per mSMH, by re-measuring the length of the same six indentations made before the abrasive challenge. The experiment consisted of five experimental groups that received between 2 and 10 erosion—abrasion cycles. Each group contained 15 specimens and samples in groups 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 underwent a total of 2, 4, 6, 8 and 10 cycles, respectively. The resin was removed from the reference area in one piece under 10× magnification and the FVM and CSP were performed. Agreement between the methods was calculated with the intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) and depicted in Bland-Altman plots. All methods presented a linear pattern of surface loss measurements throughout the experiment, leading overall to a strong, statistically significant correlation between the methods (ICC = 0.85; p<0.001). So, despite the different surface loss values, all methods presented consistent results for surface loss measurement.

Highlights

  • Erosive tooth wear is an irreversible loss of dental hard tissues, which results from the interaction of dietary or endogenous acids and intra-oral abrasive forces [1,2,3,4,5,6]

  • Various in vitro methods are used to assess the hard tissue surface loss caused by erosive tooth wear at an initial stage, where it ranges from nanometers to a maximum of a few micrometers

  • For mSMH, there was no significant differences between surface loss after 8 and 10 cycles, and for focus variation three-dimensional microscopy (FVM), there was no significant difference in surface loss between 6 and 8 cycles

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Summary

Introduction

Erosive tooth wear is an irreversible loss of dental hard tissues, which results from the interaction of dietary or endogenous acids and intra-oral abrasive forces [1,2,3,4,5,6]. It is common in developed societies [7,8,9,10,11], and early diagnosis and prevention are important [12, 13]. It would be advisable to use relative values, which might render the results of different methods more comparable

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