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Effect of silver diamine fluoride on vital dental pulp: A systematic review

Journal

JOURNAL OF DENTISTRY
Volume 119, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jdent.2022.104066

Keywords

Silver diamine fluoride; dental pulp; direct pulp capping; indirect pulp capping; pulpal response

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This study systematically reviewed the dental pulp response to silver diamine fluoride (SDF) treatment and found that direct SDF application caused pulp necrosis, while indirect application was generally biocompatible with mild inflammatory response, increased odontoblastic activity, and increased tertiary dentine formation in dental pulp.
Objective: This study aims to review systematically the dental pulp response to silver diamine fluoride (SDF) treatment, including the inflammatory response, pulp cells activity, dentinogenesis, silver penetration, and the presence of the bacteria in the dental pulp. Data: In vitro studies, animal studies, clinical studies, and case reports on the use of SDF on vital dental pulp were included. Quality assessment of the included studies was conducted. A narrative synthesis of the collected data was performed.Sources: A systematic search was performed in ProQuest, PubMed, SCOPUS, and Web of Science databases for articles published from inception to Nov 1, 2021. Study Selection: The initial search identified 1,433 publications, of which five publications met the inclusion criteria. These five publications reported the effect of direct/ indirect SDF application on the vital pulp of a total of 30 teeth. Direct SDF application on vital pulp caused pulp necrosis. Indirect SDF application caused none or mild inflammatory response of dental pulp. The odontoblasts in the dental pulp showed increased cellular activity. Tertiary dentine was formed in the pulpal side of the cavity with indirect SDF application. Accentuated incremental lines of tertiary dentine reflected disturbances in mineralisation. Silver ions were found to penetrate along the dentinal tubules but were not detected inside the pulp. Conclusion: According to the limited available literature, direct SDF application causes pulp necrosis. Indirect SDF application is generally biocompatible to dental pulp tissue with a mild inflammatory response, increased odontoblastic activity, and increased tertiary dentine formation. Future studies with precise quantitative and qualitative tests, larger sample size and longer follow-up time are imperative to understand the biological activity of dental pulp to SDF treatment.

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