The interplay of saliva, erosion and attrition on enamel and dentine

被引:6
作者
Aljulayfi, I [1 ,2 ]
O'Toole, S. [1 ]
Healy, M. [1 ]
Sumaidaa, S. [1 ]
Ali, Z. [1 ]
Bartlett, D. [1 ]
Austin, R. [1 ]
机构
[1] Kings Coll London, Guys Hosp, Ctr Clin Oral & Translat Sci, London SE1 9RT, England
[2] Prince Sattam bin Abdulaziz Univ, Coll Dent, Alkharj 16245, Saudi Arabia
关键词
Saliva; Dental erosion; Dental attrition; IN-VITRO; PELLICLE; SURFACES; TIME; WEAR; PH;
D O I
10.1016/j.sdentj.2022.01.007
中图分类号
R78 [口腔科学];
学科分类号
1003 ;
摘要
Purpose: This investigation aimed to compare the protective role of saliva against erosion and attrition challenges.Method: Polished enamel and dentine samples (n = 160) were prepared and randomly assigned to either the saliva or saliva-free group (n = 40 enamel and n = 40 dentine/group). Within each subgroup, they were allocated to four subgroups: negative control (deionized water exposure 10 min), erosion (0.3% citric acid 10 min), attrition (120 S of 300 g force), or combined erosion/attrition (0.3% citric acid 10 min then 120 S of 300 g force). Experimental cycles were repeated three times. Data analysis was performed using SPSS.Results: The mean and standard deviation (SD) of step heights produced by the attrition and erosion/attrition groups in enamel in the saliva-free group were 5.6 pm (2.4) and 13.4 pm (2.8), respectively, while they were 2.4 pm (3.8) and 12.9 pm (3.5) in the saliva group, with no significant difference between the saliva and saliva-free groups. For dentine, the corresponding step heights were 25.2 pm (5.5) and 35.9 pm (7.9) for the saliva-free group, but 21.8 pm (5.3) and 27.3 pm (6.4) for the saliva group (p < 0.001).Conclusion: There was a trend that saliva decreased wear, but this was only statistically significant for erosion/attrition dentine wear.(c) 2022 The Authors. Production and hosting by Elsevier B.V. on behalf of King Saud University. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
引用
收藏
页码:232 / 236
页数:5
相关论文
共 23 条
[1]   Thickness of acquired salivary pellicle as a determinant of the sites of dental erosion [J].
Amaechi, BT ;
Higham, SM ;
Edgar, WM ;
Milosevic, A .
JOURNAL OF DENTAL RESEARCH, 1999, 78 (12) :1821-1828
[2]   The effect of increasing sodium fluoride concentrations on erosion and attrition of enamel and dentine in vitro [J].
Austin, R. S. ;
Rodriguez, J. M. ;
Dunne, S. ;
Moazzez, R. ;
Bartlett, D. W. .
JOURNAL OF DENTISTRY, 2010, 38 (10) :782-787
[3]   Composition of Enamel Pellicle from Dental Erosion Patients [J].
Carpenter, G. ;
Cotroneo, E. ;
Moazzez, R. ;
Rojas-Serrano, M. ;
Donaldson, N. ;
Austin, R. ;
Zaidel, L. ;
Bartlett, D. ;
Proctor, G. .
CARIES RESEARCH, 2014, 48 (05) :361-367
[4]   Salivary changes and dental erosion in bulimia nervosa [J].
Dynesen, Anja Weirsoe ;
Bardow, Allan ;
Petersson, Birgit ;
Nielsen, Lene Rindal ;
Nauntofte, Birgitte .
ORAL SURGERY ORAL MEDICINE ORAL PATHOLOGY ORAL RADIOLOGY AND ENDODONTOLOGY, 2008, 106 (05) :696-707
[5]   Erosion and attrition of human enamel in vitro Part II: Influence of time and loading [J].
Eisenburger, M ;
Addy, M .
JOURNAL OF DENTISTRY, 2002, 30 (7-8) :349-352
[6]   Erosion and attrition of human enamel in vitro Part I: Interaction effects [J].
Eisenburger, M ;
Addy, M .
JOURNAL OF DENTISTRY, 2002, 30 (7-8) :341-347
[7]   A comparative profilometric in vitro study of the susceptibility of polished and natural human enamel and dentine surfaces to erosive demineralization [J].
Ganss, C ;
Klimek, J ;
Schwarz, N .
ARCHIVES OF ORAL BIOLOGY, 2000, 45 (10) :897-902
[8]   OCCLUSAL FORCES DURING CHEWING AND SWALLOWING AS MEASURED BY SOUND-TRANSMISSION [J].
GIBBS, CH ;
MAHAN, PE ;
LUNDEEN, HC ;
BREHNAN, K ;
WALSH, EK ;
HOLBROOK, WB .
JOURNAL OF PROSTHETIC DENTISTRY, 1981, 46 (04) :443-449
[9]   The effect of acidic beverages on the ultrastructure of the acquired pellicle-An in situ study [J].
Hannig, C. ;
Berndt, D. ;
Hoth-Hannig, W. ;
Hannig, M. .
ARCHIVES OF ORAL BIOLOGY, 2009, 54 (06) :518-526
[10]   Protective effect of the in situ formed short-term salivary pellicle [J].
Hannig, M ;
Fiebiger, M ;
Güntzer, M ;
Döbert, A ;
Zimehl, R ;
Nekrashevych, Y .
ARCHIVES OF ORAL BIOLOGY, 2004, 49 (11) :903-910