Abstract
Due to gingival recession both enamel and root dentine are at risk of developing caries. Both tissues are exposed to a similar environment, however there is not a validated model to evaluate the effect of fluoride on these dental substrates simultaneously. Hence, this study aimed to validate a caries model to evaluate the effect of fluoride to prevent demineralization on enamel and root-dentine. Streptococcus mutans UA159 biofilms were formed on saliva-coated bovine enamel and root dentine slabs (n = 12 per group) mounted in the same well of culture plates. The biofilms were exposed 8×/day to 10% sucrose and treated 2×/day with fluoridated solutions containing 0, 150, 450, or 1,350 ppm F; thus, simulating the use of low to high fluoride concentration toothpastes. The pH values of the culture medium was monitored 2×/day as a biofilm acidogenicity indicator. After 96 h, biofilms were collected for fluoride concentration analysis. The percentage of surface hardness loss (%SHL) was calculated for slabs. The fluoride uptake by the enamel and dentine was also determined. The model showed a dose-response because the biofilm and fluoride uptake increased and %SHL decreased at increasing fluoride concentrations (p < 0.05). Fluoride in the biofilm formed on dentine and fluoride uptake by dentine were higher than those for enamel. With the same fluoride concentration treatment, the percentage of reduction of demineralization was lower for dentine than for enamel. In conclusion, the model was validated in terms of a dose-response effect of fluoride on enamel and root dentine. Furthermore, the findings support the clinical data, suggesting that higher fluoride concentrations are necessary to control caries of root dentine than of enamel.
Highlights
The decrease of caries prevalence and the increase in life expectancy [1] allow more natural teeth to remain in the oral cavity in elderly
The data on fluoride concentration found in enamel and dentine (Table 1) were coherent with those observed for demineralization (Fig 2)
A dose-response effect was observed for both dental substrates and higher fluoride concentration was found in dentine than enamel (p < 0.05)
Summary
The decrease of caries prevalence and the increase in life expectancy [1] allow more natural teeth to remain in the oral cavity in elderly. In this context, root caries is an important problem [2, 3] and the challenge is to maintain both the coronal and root caries under control. Whenever the root is exposed to the oral cavity, enamel and cervical dentine are subjected to a similar. Under the same cariogenic challenge, dentine should be considered more susceptible to demineralization than enamel
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