Surface properties of titanium and zirconia dental implant materials and their effect on bacterial adhesion

被引:191
作者
Al-Radha, Afya Sahib Diab [1 ]
Dymock, David [1 ]
Younes, Charles
O'Sullivan, Dominic [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Bristol, Bristol Dent Hosp & Sch, Sch Oral & Dent Sci, Bristol BS1 2LY, Avon, England
关键词
Zirconia; Titanium; Bacteria; Surface characteristics; Blasting; Implant; Peri-implantitis; COMMERCIALLY PURE TITANIUM; IN-VITRO; PERI-IMPLANTITIS; PORPHYROMONAS-GINGIVALIS; SUBGINGIVAL PLAQUE; CERAMIC SURFACES; FREE-ENERGY; ADHERENCE; VIVO; BIOFILM;
D O I
10.1016/j.jdent.2011.12.006
中图分类号
R78 [口腔科学];
学科分类号
1003 ;
摘要
Objectives: Zirconia ceramic material has been widely used in implant dentistry. In this in vitro study the physiochemical properties of titanium and zirconia materials were investigated and the affinity of different bacteria to different materials was compared. Methods: Disc samples with different surface states were used: polished partially stabilized zirconia (PZ), titanium blasted with zirconia (TBZ), titanium blasted with zirconia then acid etched (TBZA), and polished titanium (PT) as a control. Surface topography was examined using scanning electron microscopy and profilometry. Contact angle, surface free energy (SFE), surface microhardness and chemical composition were determined. Disc samples were separately incubated with Streptococcus mitis and Prevotella nigrescens, either with or without pre-coating with human saliva, for 6 h and the surface area covered by bacteria was calculated from fluorescence microscope images. Results: PZ and TBZ exhibited lower surface free energy and lesser surface wettability than PT. Also, PZ and TBZ surfaces showed lower percentage of bacterial adhesion compared with control PT surface. Conclusions: The zirconia material and titanium blasted with zirconia surface (TBZ surface) showed superior effect to titanium material in reducing the adhesion of the experimented bacteria especially after coating with saliva pellicle. Modifying titanium with zirconia lead to have the same surface properties of pure zirconia material in reducing bacterial adhesion. SFE appears to be the most important factors that determine initial bacterial adhesion to smooth surface. (C) 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:146 / 153
页数:8
相关论文
共 42 条
[1]   PROTEIN ADSORPTION TO POLYMER PARTICLES - ROLE OF SURFACE-PROPERTIES [J].
ABSOLOM, DR ;
ZINGG, W ;
NEUMANN, AW .
JOURNAL OF BIOMEDICAL MATERIALS RESEARCH, 1987, 21 (02) :161-171
[2]  
Aizawa T, 2004, J CERAM SOC JPN, V112, pS1482
[3]   Comparison of surface roughness of oral hard materials to the threshold surface roughness for bacterial plaque retention: A review of the literature [J].
Bollen, CML ;
Lambrechts, P ;
Quirynen, M .
DENTAL MATERIALS, 1997, 13 (04) :258-269
[4]  
Cisar J O, 1997, Adv Dent Res, V11, P168
[5]   Osseointegration of zirconia implants compared with titanium: An in vivo study [J].
Depprich R. ;
Zipprich H. ;
Ommerborn M. ;
Naujoks C. ;
Wiesmann H.-P. ;
Kiattavorncharoen S. ;
Lauer H.-C. ;
Meyer U. ;
Kübler N.R. ;
Handschel J. .
Head & Face Medicine, 4 (1)
[6]  
Edgerton M, 1996, Int J Oral Maxillofac Implants, V11, P443
[7]   Development of a multispecies oral bacterial community in a saliva-conditioned flow cell [J].
Foster, JS ;
Kolenbrander, PE .
APPLIED AND ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY, 2004, 70 (07) :4340-4348
[8]   Fibroblast growth on surface-modified dental implants:: An in vitro study [J].
Groessner-Schreiber, B ;
Neubert, A ;
Müller, WD ;
Hopp, M ;
Griepentrog, M ;
Lange, KP .
JOURNAL OF BIOMEDICAL MATERIALS RESEARCH PART A, 2003, 64A (04) :591-599
[9]   Plaque formation on surface modified dental implants -: An in vitro study [J].
Grössner-Schreiber, B ;
Griepentrog, MH ;
Haustein, I ;
Müller, WD ;
Lange, KP ;
Briedigkeit, H ;
Göbel, UB .
CLINICAL ORAL IMPLANTS RESEARCH, 2001, 12 (06) :543-551
[10]   Modified implant surfaces show different biofilm compositions under in vivo conditions [J].
Grossner-Schreiber, Birte ;
Teichmann, Jan ;
Hannig, Matthias ;
Doerfer, Christof ;
Wenderoth, Dirk F. ;
Ott, Stephan J. .
CLINICAL ORAL IMPLANTS RESEARCH, 2009, 20 (08) :817-826