4.5 Article

In vitro evaluation of the antibacterial effect of four root canal sealers on dental biofilms

Journal

CLINICAL ORAL INVESTIGATIONS
Volume 26, Issue 6, Pages 4361-4368

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00784-022-04399-9

Keywords

Antibacterial effect; Confocal laser scanning microscope; Dental biofilm; Root canal sealer

Funding

  1. Canada Foundation for Innovation [CFI: 32623]

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This study dynamically evaluated the effect of four root canal sealers on the killing of biofilms within dentinal tubules. The results showed that calcium silicate-based sealers were more effective in killing bacteria in young biofilms compared to a traditional silicone-based sealer.
Objectives To dynamically evaluate the effect of four root canal sealers on the killing of biofilms within dentinal tubules. Materials and methods Dentin blocks were prepared for infection of the dentinal tubules. Enterococcus faecalis VP3-181 and multi-species bacteria from two donors were cultured. After 3 days of incubation, the infected dentin specimens were rinsed with sterile water for 1 min and subjected to treatment. Additionally, multi-species bacteria from donor 1 were incubated for 3 weeks to allow biofilm maturation and then the specimens were subjected to treatment. Gutta-percha-treated dentin specimens comprised the control group. A root canal sealer (bioceramic sealers: EndoSequence BC Sealer, ProRoot Endo Sealer, or GuttaFlow Bioseal; and a traditional silicone-based sealer: Guttaflow 2) was spread onto the canal walls of the dentin. The specimens were examined with confocal laser scanning microscopy at 7, 30, or 60 days. Results In the 3-day-old biofilm group, the proportion of killed bacteria decreased significantly from the first 7 days of treatment to 60 days of treatment for all sealers (p < 0.05). In the 3-week-old biofilm group, 60 days of exposure to bioceramic sealers resulted in more significant dead bacteria than 7-day exposures of the biofilms (p < 0.05). Bioceramic sealers were more effective in killing bacteria than the GuttaFlow 2 sealer (p < 0.05). Conclusions Calcium silicate-based sealers showed good antimicrobial effects against biofilms within dentinal tubules, especially in the first week in young biofilms. There is no substantive antibacterial activity observed for the examined root canal sealers against young dentinal tubule biofilms.

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