Abstract

Background The aim of this in vitro study was to evaluate the microindentation hardness and chemical composition of residual dentin left at the cavity bottom following removal of carious dentin using the Carisolv chemomechanical and Er:YAG laser caries excavation methods in comparison with the conventional tungsten-carbide bur excavation.Methods Sixty-nine extracted permanent teeth with occlusal dentin caries were assigned into three groups according to caries removal technique. Carious dentin excavation was guided by tactile method and a caries-staining dye. In stereomicroscope images (100×) of the samples, the presence or absence of residual caries was defined. The Knoop hardness value of the cavity floor was determined and atomic analysis of treated cavities was performed by energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy.ResultsThe Knoop hardness value of residual dentin left at the cavity bottom was lower (One-way ANOVA, Dunnett-C, p < 0.05) and the percentage of samples with remaining carious dentin was higher after Carisolv excavation than those obtained after conventional and laser excavations (Kruskal–Wallis, Mann–Whitney U, p < 0.05). No significant differences were found between the quantities of calcium content (Ca wt%), phosphorus content (P wt%) and calcium/phosphorus ratio of the cavities treated by three techniques (Kruskal–Wallis, Mann–Whitney U, p > 0.05).ConclusionThe results indicated that Er:YAG laser was more comparable to conventional bur excavation than chemomechanical method in the efficacy of caries removal with regard to microindentation hardness of remaining dentin and both Carisolv gel and Er:YAG laser did not alter chemical composition of residual dentin in the treated cavities.

Highlights

  • The aim of this in vitro study was to evaluate the microindentation hardness and chemical composition of residual dentin left at the cavity bottom following removal of carious dentin using the Carisolv chemomechanical and Er:YAG laser caries excavation methods in comparison with the conventional tungsten-carbide bur excavation

  • Light emitted by Er:YAG lasers is strongly absorbed by water, resulting in rapid and expansive vapourisation of water in dentin, causing explosive dislocation of dental hard tissue components

  • In spite of the favourable properties of erbium lasers, other evaluations regarding microindentation hardness and compositional changes of enamel and dentin irradiated with these lasers should be clarified before they can be routinely used as a caries removal method

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Summary

Introduction

The aim of this in vitro study was to evaluate the microindentation hardness and chemical composition of residual dentin left at the cavity bottom following removal of carious dentin using the Carisolv chemomechanical and Er:YAG laser caries excavation methods in comparison with the conventional tungsten-carbide bur excavation. Carisolv system (MediTeam Dental, Sweden) mainly contains sodium hypochlorite, three amino acids (glutamic acid, leucine, lysine) and water and has been developed with the purpose of removing all the infected dentin preventing the removal of affected dentin, and is intended to provide less painful caries excavation (Banerjee et al 2000; de Almeida Neves et al 2011; Hamama et al 2013). Light emitted by Er:YAG lasers is strongly absorbed by water, resulting in rapid and expansive vapourisation of water in dentin, causing explosive dislocation of dental hard tissue components (de Almeida Neves et al 2011; Schwass et al 2013). In spite of the favourable properties of erbium lasers, other evaluations regarding microindentation hardness and compositional changes of enamel and dentin irradiated with these lasers should be clarified before they can be routinely used as a caries removal method

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