1. The effects of scanning electron microscopy desiccation preparation on demineralized dentin surfaces
- Author
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Murray K. Marks, John D Sterrett, Kathy Schrock, Jerilyn Swann, and John R. Dunlap
- Subjects
Trimethylsilyl Compounds ,Materials science ,Scanning electron microscope ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Acid Etching, Dental ,Monolayer ,Microscopy ,Dentin ,medicine ,Humans ,Desiccation ,Tooth Demineralization ,Ethanol ,Carbon Dioxide ,Demineralization ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Chemical engineering ,chemistry ,Glutaral ,Microscopy, Electron, Scanning ,Periodontics ,Glutaraldehyde ,Oral Surgery ,Citric acid - Abstract
This study assessed the effect various scanning electron microscopy (SEM) desiccation preparation techniques have on a tufted collagen surface produced using an acid-burnished (rubbed) demineralization application technique. Citric acid- soaked cotton pellets (30%) were burnished on the dentin treatment region, rinsed in water, and then fixed. Four SEM desiccation preparation techniques were employed: (1) air-dried from glutaraldehyde; (2) air-dried from ethanol; (3) critical point dried from liquid carbon dioxide (control); or (4) air-dried from tetramethylsilane. Control specimens all displayed a characteristic tufted fibril surface. In all experimental groups, fibrils collapsed, forming an intact, undulating nondescript surface monolayer. All air-drying SEM desiccation preparation procedures appear to cause artifactual distortion of a tufted dentin collagen surface.
- Published
- 2015