3.8 Article

Determination of some trace elements in human tooth enamel

Journal

FRESENIUS JOURNAL OF ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 367, Issue 8, Pages 748-754

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s002160000461

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Determination of seven elements (Cu, Fe, Mg, Mn, Pb, Sr and Zn) in whole enamel and surface layers of extracted non-carious human teeth by FAAS, ETA AAS, ICP-AES and ICP-MS (Pb) is demonstrated. Techniques are described for obtaining whole enamel and its acid dissolution. Fifty mu m width enamel layers from outer enamel surface to a 200 mu m depth were successively etched in 1 mL of 3 M HClO4 for 3 min dissolution periods. Enamel samples were analyzed for populations under and over 20 years of age and enamel from Bronze Age teeth. Concentrations of microelements in the whole enamel and in the first surface layer (50 mu m depth) were compared. With exception of Sr and Mg, all elements show significantly higher concentrations in the first layer than in whole enamel and higher concentration in teeth of individuals over 20 years, which demonstrate the cumulative effect of these elements. The Cu, Fe, Mn, Pb and Zn concentrations in four layers of erupted and non-erupted teeth decreased while Mg and Sr concentrations increased toward enamel-dentine junction. The concentrations of most elements were almost constant as they approached the 150 mu m layer. This concentration gradient may result from interaction between saliva and teeth and supports the hypothesis that the surface de- and re-mineralization process is effective at most to 150 mu m from the enamel surface.

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