4.2 Article

Novel rechargeable calcium phosphate nanoparticle-filled dental cement

Journal

DENTAL MATERIALS JOURNAL
Volume 38, Issue 1, Pages 1-10

Publisher

JAPANESE SOC DENTAL MATERIALS DEVICES
DOI: 10.4012/dmj.2017-420

Keywords

Dental cement; Demineralization; Calcium phosphate nanoparticles; Rechargeable; Long-term ion release

Funding

  1. NIH [R01 DE17974]
  2. National Science Foundation of China [81200820, 81400487]
  3. Beijing Nova Program [xx2014B060]
  4. Beijing Municipal Administration of Hospitals' Ascent Plan [DFL 20151401]
  5. University of Maryland School of Dentistry bridging fund

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The objectives were to develop a novel rechargeable cement containing amorphous calcium-phosphate nanoparticles (nanoACP) to suppress tooth decay. Five cements were made with: (1) 60% glass particles (experimental control); (2) 40% glass+20% nanoACP; (3) 30% glass+30% nanoACP; (4) 20% glass+40% nanoACP; (5) 10% glass+50% nanoACP. Groups 1-4 had enamel bond strengths similar to Transbond XT (3M) and Vitremer (3M) (p>0.1). The nanoACP cement had calcium and phosphate ion release which increased with increasing nanoACP fillers. The recharged cement had substantial ion re-release continuously for 14 days after a single recharge. Ion re-release did not decrease with increasing recharge/re-release cycles. Groups 3-5 maintained a safe pH of medium (>5.5); however, control cements had cariogenic pH of medium (<4.5) due to biofilm acid. Therefore, nanoACP cement (1) had good bond strength to enamel, (2) possessed calcium and phosphate ion recharge/re-release capability, and (3) raised biofilm pH to a safe level to inhibit caries.

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