4.6 Article

Polymer-Induced Liquid Precursor (PILP) remineralization of artificial and natural dentin carious lesions evaluated by nanoindentation and microcomputed tomography

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JOURNAL OF DENTISTRY
卷 109, 期 -, 页码 -

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ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jdent.2021.103659

关键词

Dental materials; Dentin caries; Polymer induced liquid precursor; Remineralization; Collagen

资金

  1. NIH/NIDCR [RO1 DE016849, R21 DE028421]
  2. UCSF Catalyst Award PILP Treatment for the Repair of Dental Caries
  3. Center for Dental, Oral and CraniofacialTissue & Organ Regeneration [CDOCTORNIH/NIDCRU24DE026914]
  4. NSF I-Corps [2033171]
  5. Core Center for Musculoskeletal Biology and Medicine (CCMBM) at UCSF through NIHgrant [P30-AR066262]

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The study evaluated the efficacy of remineralizing dentin lesions using the Polymer-Induced Liquid Precursor (PILP) method with polyaspartic acid (pAsp). Novel ionomeric cement compositions and conditioning solutions were tested on demineralized dentin blocks with different lesion depths. Significant improvements in mechanical properties were observed in artificial lesions treated with PILP-releasing restoratives compared to traditional restoration methods without pAsp. Natural lesions also showed increased mineral volume content with PILP treatment. However, full recovery to normal mineral levels was not achieved in any of the natural lesions.
Objectives: The study evaluates the efficacy to remineralize artificial and natural dentin lesions through restorative dental procedures that include the Polymer-Induced Liquid Precursor (PILP) method comprising polyaspartic acid (pAsp).& nbsp; Methods: Novel ionomeric cement compositions based on bioglass 45S5 and pAsp mixtures, as well as conditioning solutions (conditioner) containing 5 mg/mL pAsp, were developed and tested on demineralized dentin blocks (3-4 mm thick) on shallow and deep lesions with the thickness of 140 mu m +/- 50 and 700 mu m +/- 50, respectively. In the first treatment group, 20 mu L of conditioner was applied to demineralized shallow (n = 3) and deep (n = 3) lesion specimens for 20 s before restoration with glass ionomer cement (RMGIC). For the PILP cement treatment group, cement was applied onto the wet surface of the demineralized specimen for both shallow (n = 3) and deep (n = 3) artificial lesions after the application of the conditioner and before the final restoration. Sample groups were compared to RMGIC restoration, for both shallow and deep lesions (n = 3 each) and treatments in PILP-solution (n = 3 for deep lesions) without restoration for 4 weeks. All of the restored specimens were immersed in simulated body fluid (SBF) solution for 2 weeks and 4 weeks for shallow and deep lesions respectively to allow for remineralization. The artificial lesion specimens were evaluated for changes in the nanomechanical profile (E-modulus and hardness) using nanoindentation. Shallow lesions were analyzed by SEM under vacuum for changes in morphology caused by PILP treatments. Also, a pilot study on human third molars with moderate lesions in dentin (n = 3) was initiated to test the efficacy of treatments in natural lesions based on mineral densities using microcomputed tomography (mu CT) at 0, 1, and 3 months.& nbsp; Results: This study showed that functional remineralization of artificial lesions using PILP-releasing restoratives occurred, indicated by an increase of the elastic modulus in shallow lesions and in the middle zone of deep artificial lesions. The mechanical improvement was significant when compared to RMGIC restoration without pAsp (P < 0.05). Nonetheless, recovery across artificial lesions was most significant when specimens were immersed into PILP-solution with restorative (P < 0.01). Furthermore, natural lesions increased in mineral volume content to a higher degree when the restorative treatment included the PILP-method (P < 0.05). However, none of the natural lesions recovered to full mineral degree regardless of the treatments.& nbsp; Clinical significance/Conclusion: These findings indicate the benefit of PILP applications in the functional repair of dentin caries and illustrate the challenge to integrate the PILP-method into a restorative approach in minimally invasive dental procedures.

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