125 results on '"Esteves-Oliveira M"'
Search Results
2. Systematic review and network meta-analysis of restorative therapy and adhesive strategies in root caries lesions
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Schmidt, J, Proesl, S, Schulz-Kornas, E, Haak, R, Meyer-Lueckel, H, Campus, G, and Esteves-Oliveira, M
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- 2024
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3. Evaluation of the masking efficacy of caries infiltration in post-orthodontic initial caries lesions: 1-year follow-up
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Wierichs, R. J., Abou-Ayash, B., Kobbe, C., Esteves-Oliveira, M., Wolf, M., Knaup, I., and Meyer-Lueckel, H.
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- 2023
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4. Influence of highly concentrated fluoride dentifrices on remineralization characteristics of enamel in vitro
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Wierichs, R. J., Westphal, S., Lausch, J., Meyer-Lueckel, H., and Esteves-Oliveira, M.
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- 2018
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5. Effects of dentifrices differing in fluoride compounds on artificial enamel caries lesions in vitro
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Wierichs, R. J., Zelck, H., Doerfer, C. E., Appel, P., Paris, S., Esteves-Oliveira, M., and Meyer-Lueckel, H.
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- 2017
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6. Caries-preventive effect of anti-erosive and nano-hydroxyapatite-containing toothpastes in vitro
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Esteves-Oliveira, M., Santos, N. M., Meyer-Lueckel, H., Wierichs, R. J., and Rodrigues, J. A.
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- 2017
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7. Rehardening of acid-softened enamel and prevention of enamel softening through CO2 laser irradiation
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Esteves-Oliveira, M., Pasaporti, C., Heussen, N., Eduardo, C.P., Lampert, F., and Apel, C.
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- 2011
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8. Prevention of toothbrushing abrasion of acid-softened enamel by CO 2 laser irradiation
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Esteves-Oliveira, M., Pasaporti, C., Heussen, N., Eduardo, C.P., Lampert, F., and Apel, C.
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- 2011
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9. Masking Effect of Self-Assembling Peptide P11-4, Fluorides and Caries Infiltration on Artificial Enamel Caries Lesions in vitro: 176
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Wierichs, R. J., Kogel, J., Lausch, J., Meyer-Lueckel, H., and Esteves-Oliveira, M.
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- 2016
10. Impact of CO2 Laser Irradiation on Enamel and Dentin Biofilm-Induced Mineral Loss: 81
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Esteves-Oliveira, M., El-Sayed, K. F., Dörfer, C., and Schwendicke, F.
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- 2016
11. Demineralization Inhibitory Effects of Highly Concentrated Fluoride Dentifrice and Fluoride Gels/Solutions on Sound Dentin and Artificial Dentin Caries Lesions in vitro
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Erdwey, D., Meyer-Lueckel, H., Esteves-Oliveira, M., Apel, C., and Wierichs, R. J.
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ddc:610 ,Dentin, Demineralization, Fluoride gel, Fluoride solution, pH-cycling ,610 Medicine & health - Abstract
Objectives: The aim of this in vitro study was to compare the demineralization inhibitory effect of gels/solutions used in combination with either standard or highly fluoridated dentifrices on sound dentin as well as on artificial dentin carieslike lesions. Methods: Bovine dentin specimens (n = 240) with two different surfaces each (sound [ST] and artificial caries lesion [DT]) were prepared and randomly allocated to twelve groups. Weekly interventions during pH-cycling (28 days, 6 × 120 min demineralization/day) were: the application of gels/solutions containing amine fluoride/sodium fluoride (12,500 ppm F [ppm]; pH = 4.4; AmF); NaF (12,500 ppm; pH = 6.6; NaF1); NaF (12,500 ppm; pH = 6.3; NaF2); silver diamine fluoride (14,200 ppm; pH = 8.7; SDF); acidulated phosphate fluoride (12,500 ppm; pH = 3.8; APF), and no intervention (standard control; S). Furthermore, half of the specimens in each group were brushed (10 s; twice per day) with dentifrice slurries containing either 1,450 ppm (e.g., AmF1450) or 5,000 ppm (e.g., AmF5000). Differences in integrated mineral loss (ΔΔZ) and lesion depth (ΔLD) were calculated between values before and after pH-cycling using transversal microradiography. Results: After pH-cycling Ss showed significantly increased ΔZDT and LDDT values, indicating further demineralization. In contrast, except for one, all groups including fluoride gels/solutions showed significantly decreased ΔZDT values. Additional use of most fluoride gels/solutions significantly enhanced mineral gain, mainly in the surface area; however, acidic gels/solutions seemed to have negative effects on lesion depths. Significance: Under the present pH-cycling conditions the highly fluoridated dentifrice significantly reduced caries progression and additional application of nearly all of the fluoride gels/solutions resulted in remineralization. However, there was no difference in the remineralizing capacity of fluoride gels/solutions when used in combination with either standard or highly fluoridated dentifrices.
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- 2021
12. Changes in dental enamel birefringence after CO2 laser irradiation through fluoride gel -a pilot study
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Esteves-Oliveira, M., Eduardo, C. P., Lampert, F., Apel, C., Aretz, Anke, editor, Hermanns-Sachweh, Benita, editor, and Mayer, Joachim, editor
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- 2008
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13. Low-fluence CO2 laser irradiation decreases enamel solubility
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Esteves-Oliveira, M., Apel, C., Gutknecht, N., Velloso, Jr, W. F., Cotrim, M. E. B., Eduardo, C. P., and Zezell, D. M.
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- 2008
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14. Re- and demineralization characteristics of dentin depending on fluoride application and baseline characteristics in situ
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Wierichs, R.J., Musiol, J, Erdwey, D, Esteves-Oliveira, M, Apel, C, and Meyer-Lueckel, Hendrik
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610 Medicine & health - Abstract
OBJECTIVES The aim of this double-blinded, randomized, cross-over in situ study was to evaluate the re- and demineralization characteristics of sound dentin as well as highly and lowly demineralized dentin after the application of different fluoride concentrations. METHODS In each of four experimental legs of four weeks 20 participants wore intraoral mandibular appliances containing two (highly demineralized [EH]) bovine enamel and four (lowly and highly demineralized [DL,DH]) bovine dentin specimens (n = 480). Each specimen included one sound (ST) and one demineralized lesion area (DT). The four randomly allocated treatments included the following dentifrices: fluoride-free, zinc-carbonate-nano-hydroxyapatite [nHA0], 0 ppm F- [negative control,NaF0], 1100 ppm F- as NaF [standard therapy,NaF1100] and 5000 ppm F- as NaF [positive control,NaF5000]. Differences in integrated mineral loss (ΔΔZ) and lesion depth (ΔLD) were calculated between values before and after the in situ period using transversal microradiography. RESULTS After the in situ period specimens of nHA0 and NaF0 showed signs of demineralization, indicated by significantly lower ΔZ&LD values for EH and DL (only nHA0)(p ≤ 0.028), whereas specimens of NaF1100 and NaF5000 showed signs of remineralization, indicated by significantly higher ΔZ values for EH (only NaF5000), DL and DH (p ≤ 0.012). The correlation between ΔΔZDT/ΔΔZST and F- was moderate for EH(rDT = 0.497;rST = 0.463) and DL(rDT = 0.575;rST = 0.598) and strong for DH(rDH = 0.700;rST = 0.611)(p < 0.001). No significant differences for ΔΔZDT/ΔΔZST were observed between nHA0 and NaF0(p ≥ 0.333;ANCOVA). CONCLUSION The present in situ model was capable to reveal a fluoride dose-response on sound, lowly and highly demineralized dentin and also enamel specimens. Furthermore, both fluoride-free dentifrices, one containing nanohydroxyapatite, did not hamper demineralization. CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE The present in situ model was capable to reveal a fluoride dose-response on dentin similar to the anticipated clinical efficacy. Highly demineralized specimens seem to be recommendable for measuring anti-caries effects on dentin in situ. Furthermore both fluoride-free dentifrices, one containing nanohydroxyapatite, did not hamper demineralization. The study was registered in the German Clinical Trials Register (DRKS-ID: DRKS00011653).
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- 2020
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15. Tin-Containing Fluoride Solution Combined with CO2 Laser Irradiation for Erosion Prevention: 214
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Esteves-Oliveira, M., Witulski, N., Apel, C., Meyer-Lückel, H., and Eduardo, C. P.
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- 2013
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16. Effect of CO2 Laser (10.6 μm) Irradiation at 2 J/cm2 on Caries Prevention in vivo: 47
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Esteves-Oliveira, M., Pollheim, H., Lampert, F., Eduardo, C. P., Conrads, G., and ApeP, C.
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- 2011
17. Re- and demineralization characteristics of dentin depending on fluoride application and baseline characteristics in situ
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Wierichs, R.J., primary, Musiol, J., additional, Erdwey, D., additional, Esteves-Oliveira, M., additional, Apel, C., additional, and Meyer-Lueckel, H., additional
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- 2020
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18. CO2 Laser (10.6 μm) Parameters for Caries Prevention in Dental Enamel
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Esteves-Oliveira, M., Zezell, D. M., Meister, J., Franzen, R., Stanzel, S., Lampert, F., Eduardo, C. P., and Apel, C.
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- 2009
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19. Glass-ceramic coating material for the CO2 laser based sintering of thin films as caries and erosion protection
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Bilandzic, M.D., Wollgarten, S., Stollenwerk, J., Poprawe, R., Esteves-Oliveira, M., Fischer, H., and Publica
- Abstract
Objectives The established method of fissure-sealing using polymeric coating materials exhibits limitations on the long-term. Here, we present a novel technique with the potential to protect susceptible teeth against caries and erosion. We hypothesized that a tailored glass-ceramic material could be sprayed onto enamel-like substrates to create superior adhesion properties after sintering by a CO2 laser beam. Methods A powdered dental glass-ceramic material from the system SiO2-Na2O-K2O-CaO-Al2O3-MgO was adjusted with individual properties suitable for a spray coating process. The material was characterized using X-ray fluorescence analysis (XRF), heating microscopy, dilatometry, scanning electron microscopy (SEM), grain size analysis, biaxial flexural strength measurements, fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), and gas pycnometry. Three different groups of samples (each n = 10) where prepared: Group A, powder pressed glass-ceramic coating material; Group B, sintered hydroxyapatite specimens; and Group C, enamel specimens (prepared from bovine teeth). Group B and C where spray coated with glass-ceramic powder. All specimens were heat treated using a CO2 laser beam process. Cross-sections of the laser-sintered specimens were analyzed using laser scanning microscopy (LSM), energy dispersive X-ray analysis (EDX), and SEM. Results The developed glass-ceramic material (grain size d50 = 13.1 mm, coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE) = 13.3 10−6/K) could be spray coated on all tested substrates (mean thickness = 160 mm). FTIR analysis confirmed an absorption of the laser energy up to 95%. The powdered glass-ceramic material was successfully densely sintered in all sample groups. The coating interface investigation by SEM and EDX proved atomic diffusion and adhesion of the glass-ceramic material to hydroxyapatite and to dental enamel. Significance A glass-ceramic material with suitable absorption properties was successfully sprayed and laser-sintered in thin films on hydroxyapatite as well as on bovine enamel. The presented novel technique of tooth coating with a dental glass-ceramic using a CO2-laser holds a great potential as a possible method to protect susceptible teeth against caries and erosion.
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- 2017
20. A new laser-processing strategy for improving enamel erosion resistance
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Esteves-Oliveira, M, Wollgarten, S, Liebegall, S, Jansen, Patrick, Bilandzic, M, Meyer-Lückel, Hendrik, Fischer, H, Stollenwerk, J, Poprawe, R, and Publica
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stomatognathic system ,610 Medicine & health - Abstract
In the present study, a new automatic laser-processing strategy allowing standardized irradiation of natural tooth areas was investigated. The objective was to find a combination of laser parameters that could cause over a 600°C temperature increase at the enamel surface while not damaging enamel, avoiding temperature change above 5.5°C in the pulp and increasing enamel erosion resistance. Seventy-seven bovine enamel samples were randomly divided into 6 laser groups and 1 negative control (C/no treatment/ n = 11). A scanning strategy (7 × 3 mm) was used for the CO2 laser treatment (λ = 10.6 µm, 0.1-18 J/cm2) with different pulse durations-namely, 20 µs (G20), 30 µs (G30), 55 µs (G55), and 490 µs (G490), as well as 2 modified pulse distances (G33d, G40d). Measurements of temperature change were performed at the surface (thermal camera/50 Hz), at the underside (thermocouples), and at the pulp chamber using a thermobath and human molars ( n = 10). In addition, histology and X-ray diffraction (XRD/ n = 10) were performed. Erosion was tested using an erosive cycling over 6 d, including immersion in citric acid (2 min/0.05 M/pH = 2.3) 6 times daily. Surface loss was measured using a profilometer and statistical analysis with a 2-way repeated-measures analysis of variance (α = 0.05). Only G20 fulfilled the temperature requirements at the surface (619 ± 21.8°C), at the underside (5.3 ± 1.4°C), and at the pulp (2.0 ± 1.0°C), and it caused no mineral phase change and significant reduction of enamel surface loss (-13.2 ± 4.0 µm) compared to C (-37.0 ± 10.1 µm, P < 0.05). A laser-scanning strategy (20 µs/2 kHz/1.25 J/cm2, 3.4 mm/s) has been established that fulfilled the criteria for biological safety and significantly increased enamel erosion resistance (64%) in vitro.
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- 2017
21. Surface characterization and short-term adhesion to Zirconia after ultra-short pulsed laser irradiation
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Esteves Oliveira, M., Jansen, P., Wehner, M., Dohrn, A., Bello-Silva, M.S., Paula Eduardo, C. de, Meyer-Lueckel, H., and Publica
- Abstract
Purpose: To evaluate the suitability of an ultra-short pulsed laser (USPL) to treat zirconia ceramic surfaces and increase their adhesion to dual-curing resin cement. Materials and Methods: Twenty 10 × 10 × 5 mm³ blocks were prepared from a zirconia ceramic (Y-TZP). The specimens were polished and randomly assigned to four groups (n = 5) which received the following surface treatments: sandblasting (SB) with Al2O3 particles and silica coating (SC) with SiO2 particles as positive controls; two groups received USPL irradiation, one with 10 scan repetitions (L10) and the other with 20 (L20). Laser irradiation was performed at 1030 nm, 2.3 J/cm², 6 ps pulse duration. The ceramic blocks were duplicated in composite resin and cemented with a dual-curing resin cement. Half of the blocks were then stored in water (37°C) for 24 h and the other half for 1 month. At each time, 40 to 60 sticks per group were subjected to microtensile bond strength testing. Data were analyzed statistically using the Kruskal-Wallis test (a = 0.05). Results: Laser-treated zirconia presented statistically significantly higher roughness than did SB and SC. After 24 h, the highest bond strength means (MPa) were achieved by L10 (42.3 ± 10.8) and L20 (37.9 ± 14.4), and both of them were statistically significantly higher than SB (22.0 ± 5.3) and SC (20.8 ± 7.1) (p < 0.05). After 1 month of storage, L10- and L20-treated zirconia still showed significantly higher bond strengths than did SB- and SC-treated zirconia (p < 0.05). Conclusion: USPL irradiation significantly increases bond strength of zirconia ceramic to dual-curing resin cement and might be an alternative for improving adhesion to this material.
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- 2016
22. A New Laser-Processing Strategy for Improving Enamel Erosion Resistance
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Esteves-Oliveira, M., primary, Wollgarten, S., additional, Liebegall, S., additional, Jansen, P., additional, Bilandzic, M., additional, Meyer-Lueckel, H., additional, Fischer, H., additional, Stollenwerk, J., additional, and Poprawe, R., additional
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- 2017
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23. Caries-preventive effect of anti-erosive and nano-hydroxyapatite-containing toothpastes in vitro
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Esteves-Oliveira, M., primary, Santos, N. M., additional, Meyer-Lueckel, H., additional, Wierichs, R. J., additional, and Rodrigues, J. A., additional
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- 2016
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24. Effects of dentifrices differing in fluoride compounds on artificial enamel caries lesions in vitro
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Wierichs, R. J., primary, Zelck, H., additional, Doerfer, C. E., additional, Appel, P., additional, Paris, S., additional, Esteves-Oliveira, M., additional, and Meyer-Lueckel, H., additional
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- 2016
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25. Precise ablation of dental hard tissues with ultra-short pulsed lasers. Preliminary exploratory investigation on adequate laser parameters
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Bello-Silva, M.S., Wehner, M., Paula Eduardo, C. de, Lampert, F., Poprawe, R., Hermans, M., Esteves-Oliveira, M., and Publica
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This study aimed to evaluate the possibility of introducing ultra-short pulsed lasers (USPL) in restorative dentistry by maintaining the well-known benefits of lasers for caries removal, but also overcoming disadvantages, such as thermal damage of irradiated substrate. USPL ablation of dental hard tissues was investigated in two phases. Phase 1-different wavelengths (355, 532, 1,045, and 1,064 nm), pulse durations (picoseconds and femtoseconds) and irradiation parameters (scanning speed, output power, and pulse repetition rate) were assessed for enamel and dentin. Ablation rate was determined, and the temperature increase measured in real time. Phase 2-the most favorable laser parameters were evaluated to correlate temperature increase to ablation rate and ablation efficiency. The influence of cooling methods (air, air-water spray) on ablation process was further analyzed. All parameters tested provided precise and selective tissue ablation. For all lasers, faster scann ing speeds resulted in better interaction and reduced temperature increase. The most adequate results were observed for the 1064-nm ps-laser and the 1045-nm fs-laser. Forced cooling caused moderate changes in temperature increase, but reduced ablation, being considered unnecessary during irradiation with USPL. For dentin, the correlation between temperature increase and ablation efficiency was satisfactory for both pulse durations, while for enamel, the best correlation was observed for fs-laser, independently of the power used. USPL may be suitable for cavity preparation in dentin and enamel, since effective ablation and low temperature increase were observed. If adequate laser parameters are selected, this technique seems to be promising for promoting the laser-assisted, minimally invasive approach.
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- 2013
26. Changes in dental enamel birefringence after CO2 laser irradiation through fluoride gel -a pilot study
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Esteves-Oliveira, M., primary, Eduardo, C. P., additional, Lampert, F., additional, and Apel, C., additional
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27. In vitro evaluation of the potential of CO2 laser associated to fluorides in inhibiting human enamel erosion
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Ramos-Oliveira, TM, primary, Ramos, TM, additional, Esteves-Oliveira, M, additional, Eduardo, CP, additional, Apel, C, additional, Fischer, T, additional, and Freitas, PM., additional
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- 2012
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28. Ablation of dental hard tissues with ultra-sort pulsed lasers
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Bello-Silva, MS, primary, Wehner, M, additional, Lampert, F, additional, Hermans, M, additional, Eduardo, CP, additional, and Esteves-Oliveira, M., additional
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- 2012
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29. Morphological analysis of enamel surface treated with CO2 laser and submitted to erosion demineralization; An in situ study
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Ramalho, KM, primary, Apel, C, additional, Lampert, F, additional, Rocha, RG, additional, Eduardo, CP, additional, and Esteves-Oliveira, M., additional
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- 2012
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30. Microtensile bons strength of a self-etching adhesive to eroded dentin submitted to different surface treatments
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Ramos, TM, primary, Ramos-Oliveira, TM, additional, Freitas, PM, additional, Esteves-Oliveira, M, additional, Gutknecht, N, additional, and Eduardo, CP., additional
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- 2012
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31. In vivo caries inhibition after CO2 laser irradiation at 10.6 micronm
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Esteves-Oliveira, M, primary, Pollheim, H, additional, Lampert, F, additional, Eduardo, CP, additional, Conrads, G, additional, and Apel, C., additional
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- 2012
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32. Prevention of toothbrushing abrasion of acid-softened enamel by CO2 laser irradiation
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Esteves-Oliveira, M., primary, Pasaporti, C., additional, Heussen, N., additional, Eduardo, C.P., additional, Lampert, F., additional, and Apel, C., additional
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- 2011
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33. Dentine caries inhibition through CO2 laser (10.6μm) irradiation and fluoride application, in vitro
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Esteves-Oliveira, M., primary, Zezell, D.M., additional, Ana, P.A., additional, Yekta, S.S., additional, Lampert, F., additional, and Eduardo, C.P., additional
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- 2011
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34. Protective effect of CO2 laser (10.6 μm) and fluoride on enamel erosion in vitro.
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Ramalho KM, de Paula Eduardo C, Heussen N, Rocha RG, Lampert F, Apel C, Esteves-Oliveira M, Ramalho, Karen Müller, Eduardo, Carlos de Paula, Heussen, Nicole, Rocha, Rodney Garcia, Lampert, Friedrich, Apel, Christian, and Esteves-Oliveira, Marcella
- Abstract
The aim of this study was to analyze the effect of CO(2) laser (10.6 μm) irradiation with 5-μs pulse width in prevention of enamel erosion due to citric acid exposure in vitro. One hundred forty-four bovine enamel samples were cut into 5 × 5 × 2-mm-size slabs and polished to obtain plane surfaces. Enamel surfaces were covered with acid-resistant varnish, except for a central area of 2.5 mm in diameter. The samples were divided into four groups (n = 12/group/day): C-control, no treatment; L-CO(2) laser irradiation (0.3 J/cm(2), 5 μs, 226 Hz); F-topical fluoride treatment, 1.25%F(-) (AmF/NaF) for 3 min; and FL-fluoride treatment + CO(2) laser. For erosive demineralization, samples were immersed in 40 ml of citric acid (0.05 M, pH 2.3) for 20 min two times per day during 5 days. After 1, 3, and 5 days, surface loss was measured by digital profilometer. According to the repeated measure ANOVA and post hoc comparisons, all the treatments showed statistically significant reduction of enamel loss as compared to control group, in all investigated times (p < 0.0001): L (52%,31%,37%); F (28%,24%,29%); FL (73%,55%,57%). Both CO(2) laser irradiation alone (L) and the combined laser-fluoride treatment (FL) caused less enamel loss than the fluoride group (F) in all days (p < 0.0001 for L in all times; and p < 0.0001, p = 0.0220 and p = 0.0051 for F, respectively, at days 1, 3, and 5). Under the conditions of this study, CO(2) laser irradiation (0.3 J/cm(2), 5 μs, 226 Hz) could effectively reduce enamel surface loss due to citric acid exposure, in vitro. This effect was still observed after 5 days of repeated acid exposures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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35. Verification of nerve integrity after surgical intervention using quantitative sensory testing.
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Said-Yekta S, Smeets R, Esteves-Oliveira M, Stein JM, Riediger D, and Lampert F
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PURPOSE: The aim of this study was to apply a standardized Quantitative Sensory Testing (QST) approach in patients to investigate whether oral surgery can lead to sensory changes, even if the patients do not report any sensory disturbances. Furthermore, this study determines the degree and duration of possible neuronal hyperexcitability due to local inflammatory trauma after oral surgery. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Orofacial sensory functions were investigated by psychophysical means in 60 patients (30 male, 30 female) in innervation areas of infraorbital nerves, mental nerves and lingual nerves after different interventions in oral surgery. The patients were tested 1 week, 4 weeks, 7 weeks, and 10 weeks postoperatively. As controls for bilateral sensory changes after unilateral surgery, tests were additionally performed in 20 volunteers who did not have any dental restorations. RESULTS: No differences were found between the control group and the control side of the patients. Although not 1 of the patients reported paresthesia or other sensory changes postoperatively, QST detected significant differences between the control and the test side in the mental and lingual regions. Test sides were significantly less sensitive for thermal parameters (cold, warm, and heat). No differences were found in the infraorbital region. Patients showed significantly decreased pain pressure thresholds on the operated side. QST monitored recovery over time in all patients. CONCLUSIONS: The results show that oral surgery can lead to sensory deficits in the mental and lingual region, even if the patients do not notice any sensory disturbances. The applied QST battery is a useful tool to investigate trigeminal nerve function in the early postoperative period. In light of the increasing forensic implication, this tool can serve to objectify clinical findings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
36. Prevention of toothbrushing abrasion of acid-softened enamel by CO2 laser irradiation
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Esteves-Oliveira, M., Pasaporti, C., Heussen, N., Eduardo, C.P., Lampert, F., and Apel, C.
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TOOTH abrasion , *TOOTHBRUSHES , *DENTAL enamel microabrasion , *CARBON dioxide lasers , *IRRADIATION , *LASERS in dentistry , *PROFILOMETER - Abstract
Abstract: Objective: The aim of the present study was to evaluate the effect of CO2 laser irradiation (10.6μm) at 0.3J/cm2 (0.5μs; 226Hz) on the resistance of softened enamel to toothbrushing abrasion, in vitro. Methods: Sixty human enamel samples were obtained, polished with silicon carbide papers and randomly divided into five groups (n =12), receiving 5 different surface treatments: laser irradiation (L), fluoride (AmF/NaF gel) application (F), laser prior to fluoride (LF), fluoride prior to laser (FL), non-treated control (C). After surface treatment they were submitted to a 25-day erosive-abrasive cycle in 100ml sprite light (90s) and brushed twice daily with an electric toothbrush. Between the demineralization periods samples were immersed in supersaturated mineral solution. At the end of the experiments enamel surface loss was determined using a contact profilometer and morphological analysis was performed using scanning electron microscopy (SEM). For SEM analysis of demineralization pattern, cross-sectional cuts of cycled samples were prepared. The data were statistically analysed by one-way ANOVA model with subsequent pairwise comparison of treatments. Results: Abrasive surface loss was significantly lower in all laser groups compared to both control and fluoride groups (p <0.0001 in all cases). Amongst the laser groups no significant difference was observed. Softened enamel layer underneath lesions was less pronounced in laser-irradiated samples. Conclusion: Irradiation of dental enamel with a CO2 laser at 0.3J/cm2 (5μs, 226Hz) either alone or in combination with amine fluoride gel significantly decreases toothbrushing abrasion of softened-enamel, in vitro. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2011
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37. Dentine caries inhibition through CO2 laser (10.6μm) irradiation and fluoride application, in vitro
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Esteves-Oliveira, M., Zezell, D.M., Ana, P.A., Yekta, S.S., Lampert, F., and Eduardo, C.P.
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CAVITY prevention , *CARBON dioxide lasers , *DENTAL pulp , *PHOSPHATES , *CALCIUM , *CONTROL groups , *TEMPERATURE measurements , *INDUCTIVELY coupled plasma atomic emission spectrometry - Abstract
Abstract: Objective: The purpose of the study was to investigate whether dentine irradiation with a pulsed CO2 laser (10.6μm) emitting pulses of 10ms is capable of reducing dentine calcium and phosphorus losses in an artificial caries model. Design: The 90 dentine slabs obtained from bovine teeth were randomly divided into six groups (n =15): negative control group (GC); positive control group, treated with fluoride 1.23% (GF); and laser groups irradiated with 8J/cm2 (L8); irradiated as in L8+fluoride 1.23% (L8F); irradiated with 11J/cm2 (L11); irradiated as in L11+fluoride 1.23% (L11F). After laser irradiation the samples were submitted to a pH-cycling model for 9 days. The calcium and phosphorous contents in the de- and remineralization solutions were measured by means of inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectrometer – ICP-OES. Additionally intrapulpal temperature measurements were performed. The obtained data were analysed by means of ANOVA and Tukey''s test (α =0.05). Results: In the demineralization solutions the groups L11F and GF presented significantly lower means of calcium and phosphorous losses than the control group; and in L11F means were significantly lower than in the fluoride group. Both irradiation parameters tested caused intrapulpal temperature increase below 2°C. Conclusion: It can be concluded that under the conditions of this study, CO2 laser irradiation (10.6μm) with 11J/cm2 (540mJ and 10Hz) of fluoride treated dentine surfaces decreases the loss of calcium and phosphorous in the demineralization process and does not cause excessive temperature increase inside the pulp chamber. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2011
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38. CO2 Laser (10.6 microm) parameters for caries prevention in dental enamel.
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Esteves-Oliveira M, Zezell DM, Meister J, Franzen R, Stanzel S, Lampert F, Eduardo CP, and Apel C
- Abstract
Although CO(2) laser irradiation can decrease enamel demineralisation, it has still not been clarified which laser wavelength and which irradiation conditions represent the optimum parameters for application as preventive treatment. The aim of the present explorative study was to find low-fluence CO(2) laser (lambda = 10.6 microm) parameters resulting in a maximum caries-preventive effect with the least thermal damage. Different laser parameters were systematically evaluated in 3 steps. In the first experiment, 5 fluences of 0.1, 0.3, 0.4, 0.5 and 0.6 J/cm(2), combined with high repetition rates and 10 micros pulse duration, were chosen for the experiments. In a second experiment, the influence of different pulse durations (5, 10, 20, 30 and 50 micros) on the demineralisation of dental enamel was assessed. Finally, 3 different irradiation times (2, 5 and 9 s) were tested in a third experiment. In total, 276 bovine enamel blocks were used for the experiments. An 8-day pH-cycling regime was performed after the laser treatment. Demineralisation was assessed by lesion depth measurements with a polarised light microscope, and morphological changes were assessed with a scanning electron microscope. Irradiation with 0.3 J/cm(2), 5 micros, 226 Hz for 9 s (2,036 overlapping pulses) increased caries resistance by up to 81% compared to the control and was even significantly better than fluoride application (25%, p < 0.0001). Scanning electron microscopy examination did not reveal any obvious damage caused by the laser irradiation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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39. CO2 Laser (10.6 μm) Parameters for Caries Prevention in Dental Enamel.
- Author
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Esteves-Oliveira, M., Zezell, D. M., Meister, J., Franzen, R., Stanzel, S., Lampert, F., Eduardo, C. P., and Apel, C.
- Subjects
- *
DENTAL enamel , *DENTAL caries , *WAVELENGTHS , *DENTIN , *TOOTH care & hygiene - Abstract
Although CO2 laser irradiation can decrease enamel demineralisation, it has still not been clarified which laser wavelength and which irradiation conditions represent the optimum parameters for application as preventive treatment. The aim of the present explorative study was to find low-fluence CO2 laser (λ = 10.6 μm) parameters resulting in a maximum caries-preventive effect with the least thermal damage. Different laser parameters were systematically evaluated in 3 steps. In the first experiment, 5 fluences of 0.1, 0.3, 0.4, 0.5 and 0.6 J/cm2, combined with high repetition rates and 10 μs pulse duration, were chosen for the experiments. In a second experiment, the influence of different pulse durations (5, 10, 20, 30 and 50 μs) on the demineralisation of dental enamel was assessed. Finally, 3 different irradiation times (2, 5 and 9 s) were tested in a third experiment. In total, 276 bovine enamel blocks were used for the experiments. An 8-day pH-cycling regime was performed after the laser treatment. Demineralisation was assessed by lesion depth measurements with a polarised light microscope, and morphological changes were assessed with a scanning electron microscope. Irradiation with 0.3 J/cm2, 5 μs, 226 Hz for 9 s (2,036 overlapping pulses) increased caries resistance by up to 81% compared to the control and was even significantly better than fluoride application (25%, p < 0.0001). Scanning electron microscopy examination did not reveal any obvious damage caused by the laser irradiation. Copyright © 2009 S. Karger AG, Basel [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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40. Low-fluence CO2 laser irradiation decreases enamel solubility.
- Author
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Esteves-Oliveira, M., Apel, C., Gutknecht, N., Velloso, W. F. Jr, Cotrim, M. E. B., Eduardo, C. P., and Zezell, D. M.
- Abstract
This study investigated whether subablative-pulsed CO
2 laser (10.6 μm) irradiation, using fluences lower than 1 J/cm2 , was capable of reducing enamel acid solubility. Fifty-one samples of bovine dental enamel were divided into three groups: control group, which was not irradiated (CG); group laser A (LA) irradiated with 0.3 J/cm2 ; and group laser B (LB) irradiated with 0.7 J/cm2 . After irradiation, the samples were subjected to demineralization in an acetate buffer solution and were then analyzed by SEM. A finite-element model was used to calculate the temperature increase. The calcium and phosphorous content in the demineralization solution were measured with an ICP-OES. ANOVA and the t-test pairwise comparison (p < 0.016) revealed that LB showed significantly lower mean Ca and P content values in the demineralization solution than other groups. A reduction in the enamel solubility can be obtained with pulsed CO2 laser irradiation (0.7 J/cm2 , 135 mJ/pulse, 74 Hz, 100 μs) without any surface photomodification and a less than 2°C temperature increase at a 3-mm depth from the surface. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2008
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41. Analysis of trigeminal nerve disorders after oral and maxillofacial intervention
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Ghassemi Alireza, Stein Jamal M, Esteves-Oliveira Marcella, Grosjean Maurice B, Koch Felix, Said Yekta Sareh, Riediger Dieter, Lampert Friedrich, and Smeets Ralf
- Subjects
Specialties of internal medicine ,RC581-951 - Abstract
Abstract Background Quantitative sensory testing (QST) is applied to evaluate somatosensory nerve fiber function in the spinal system. This study uses QST in patients with sensory dysfunctions after oral and maxillofacial surgery. Methods Orofacial sensory functions were investigated by psychophysical means in 60 volunteers (30 patients with sensory disturbances and 30 control subjects) in innervation areas of the infraorbital, mental and lingual nerves. The patients were tested 1 week, 4 weeks, 7 weeks and 10 weeks following oral and maxillofacial surgery. Results QST monitored somatosensory deficits and recovery of trigeminal nerve functions in all patients. Significant differences (p < 0.05) between control group and patients were shown for cold, warm and mechanical detection thresholds and for cold, heat and mechanical pain thresholds. Additionally, QST monitored recovery of nerve functions in all patients. Conclusion QST can be applied for non-invasive assessment of sensory nerve function (Aβ-, Aδ- and C-fiber) in the orofacial region and is useful in the diagnosis of trigeminal nerve disorders in patients.
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- 2010
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42. Oral health inequalities in immigrant populations worldwide: a scoping review of dental caries and periodontal disease prevalence.
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Banihashem Rad SA, Esteves-Oliveira M, Maklennan A, Douglas GVA, Castiglia P, and Campus G
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- Humans, Prevalence, Child, Dental Caries epidemiology, Emigrants and Immigrants statistics & numerical data, Oral Health statistics & numerical data, Health Status Disparities, Periodontal Diseases epidemiology, Global Health statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background: Inequalities in immigrants' oral health are often masked in population-level data. Therefore, this paper was planned to assess the prevalence data on oral health diseases, namely dental caries, and periodontitis, among immigrants worldwide., Methods: Following a systematic search in Scopus, Embase, and PubMed for studies published between 2011 and 2023, 1342 records were identified. Following title and abstract screening, 76 studies remained for full-text eligibility-screening based on predefined inclusion criteria. Thirty-two studies were included in the review., Results: Dental caries figures were higher in immigrant populations compared to the local population, regardless of host countries, age, gender, or nationality. In children, the overall mean and standard deviation (SD) for decayed, missing, and filled teeth in the primary dentition (d
3 mft) was 3.63(2.47), and for D3 MFT (permanent dentition), it was 1.7(1.2). Upon comparing overall mean caries counts in children and adults with their control groups in the included studies, untreated dental caries (D3 T and d3 t) constituted the dominant share of caries experience (D3 MFT and d3 mft) in immigrant children. For the local population, the highest proportion of caries experience was attributed to filled teeth (FT and ft). Dentin caries prevalence among immigrants ranged from 22% to 88.7% in the primary dentition and 5.6% to 90.9% in the permanent dentition. Gingivitis ranged from 5.1% to 100%. Oral health varied greatly between studies. Regarding oral health accessibility, 52% to 88% of immigrant children had never been to a dentist, suggesting a very limited level of accessibility to dental health services., Conclusion: It is imperative to develop interventions and policies that have been customized to address the oral health disparities experienced by immigrant populations. Additionally, host countries should actively implement measures aimed at enhancing the accessibility of oral health care services for these individuals. The utilization of available data is crucial in establishing a hierarchy of objectives aimed at enhancing the oral health of immigrant populations., Trial Registration: The Scoping review protocol was registered at OSF Registries with registration number ( https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/MYXS4 )., (© 2024. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2024
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43. Evaluating the Effectiveness of the Nudge Theory in Improving the Oral Self-Care of Schoolchildren with Refugee and Immigrant Backgrounds in Mashhad, Iran.
- Author
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Banihashem Rad SA, Esteves-Oliveira M, Kazemian A, Azami N, Khorshid M, Sohrabi A, Attaran Khorasani A, and Campus G
- Abstract
Nudge theory proposes using subtle interventions to encourage individuals to make better decisions. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effectiveness of the Nudge theory in plaque control and assess caries experience among third-grade primary schoolchildren with refugee and immigrant backgrounds in Mashhad, Iran. Moreover, Afghan and Iranian schoolchildren were compared to assess differences in oral health outcomes. A quasi-experimental field trial was conducted in three public primary schools, comprising 309 participants approximately 9 years old. Interventions were randomly assigned to three schools: School I Messages based on Social Norms (MSN), School II Messages based on Fear of Negative Outcome (MFNO), and School III control group (C). MSN and MFNO received customized motivational video clips at baseline, while C only received Oral hygiene instruction (OHI). All participants received OHI, a brush, and toothpaste. Baseline plaque index (PI) and caries experience in primary and permanent dentition (dmft/DMFT) were recorded. PI was reassessed at two weeks, two months, and six months post-intervention. All data were subjected to statistical analysis. The mean PI decreased significantly in all three groups at the two-week follow-up ( p < 0.01). The PI improvements declined over a six-month follow-up period in all groups, and the mean PI difference after six months compared to the pre-intervention was significant only in MSN and MFNO ( p < 0.01), while C reverted almost to the pre-study level. Schoolchildren with at least one filled tooth or Iranian nationality showed a greater PI reduction ( p < 0.01, p = 0.05). The overall mean ± SD dmft and DMFT were 4.24 ± 2.11 and 1.70 ± 1.24, respectively. Among all the examined participants, 32 (10.40%) individuals were caries-free. The mean dmft was statistically significantly higher in Afghan children than in Iranians ( p = 0.01). MSN was more effective on PI reduction in the short term, while MFNO was more long-lasting. Using the Nudge theory via visual aids was more effective in motivating children to perform better oral self-care than solely traditional OHI.
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- 2024
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44. Caries status in 12-year-old children, geographical location and socioeconomic conditions across European countries: A systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Vukovic A, Schmutz KA, Borg-Bartolo R, Cocco F, Rosianu RS, Jorda R, Maclennon A, Cortes-Martinicorenas JF, Rahiotis C, Madléna M, Arghittu A, Dettori M, Castiglia P, Esteves-Oliveira M, Cagetti MG, Wolf TG, and Campus G
- Abstract
Background: Understanding of socioeconomic context might enable more efficient evidence-based preventive strategies in oral health., Aim: The study assessed the caries-related socioeconomic macro-factors in 12-year-olds across European countries., Design: This systematic review involved epidemiological surveys on the caries status of 12-year-olds from 2011 to 2022. DMFT was analyzed in relation to gross national income (GNI), United Nations Statistical Division geographical categorization of European countries (M49), unemployment rate, Human Development Index (HDI), and per capita expenditure on dental health care. A meta-analysis was performed for countries reporting data on DMFT, stratified by GNI, and geographical location of European countries, using a random-effects model., Results: The study involved 493 360 children from 36 countries in the geographic region of Europe. The analysis confirmed a strong negative correlation between income and caries experience (p < .01). Children living in higher-income countries showed 90% lower odds of poor oral health than in middle-income countries. Children living in West Europe showed 90% lower odds of poor oral health than children living in East Europe., Conclusion: The strong effect of macro-level socioeconomic contexts on children's oral health suggests favoring upstream preventive oral health strategies in countries with economic growth difficulties, Eastern and Southern parts of Europe., (© 2024 The Author(s). International Journal of Paediatric Dentistry published by BSPD, IAPD and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2024
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45. Distribution of initial caries lesions in relation to fixed orthodontic therapy. A systematic review and meta-analysis.
- Author
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Salerno C, Grazia Cagetti M, Cirio S, Esteves-Oliveira M, Wierichs RJ, Kloukos D, and Campus G
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- Humans, Prevalence, Incidence, Orthodontic Appliances, Fixed adverse effects, Orthodontic Brackets adverse effects, Dental Caries epidemiology, Dental Caries etiology
- Abstract
Background: Initial caries lesion (ICLs) adjacent to orthodontic brackets are the most common side effect of orthodontic treatment with fixed appliances. The reported prevalence is uncertain and varies considerably across studies, from 27% to 97%., Objectives: This paper was designed to evaluate and synthesize the available evidence on the prevalence and incidence rates of ICLs in relation to orthodontic treatment. Selection criteria: The review (Prospero protocol CRD42023412952) included randomized and non-randomized clinical trials of interventions, cohort studies, and cross-sectional studies, published after 1990 on the prevalence or incidence of ICLs during or after orthodontic treatment with fixed appliances. Search methods: Pubmed, Scopus, and Embase databases were searched from 1990 until 01 May 2023. The risk of bias assessment was performed with RoB 2 and ROBINS-I tool and the Joanna Briggs Institute Critical Appraisal Checklist. Data collection and analysis: The proportion of individuals with ICLs, reported as the number/percentage of individuals/teeth with ICLs or mean number of ICLs per subject, were used to synthesize results., Results: The search yielded a total of 468 papers; 21 studies were included in the systematic review, 2 of which were not included in the meta-analysis. The prevalence rate [95%CI] of ICLs was 0.57% [0.48; 0.65] in 1448 patients, 0.22% [0.14; 0.33] in 11583 teeth, with a mean number of lesions equal to 2.24 [1.79; 2.70] in 484 patients evaluated. The incidence rate of new carious lesions developed during orthodontic treatment was 0.48% [0.33; 0.63] in 533 patients, 0.15% [0.08; 0.26] in 1890 teeth with a mean number of ICLs equal to 2.29 [1.12; 3.46] in 208 patients evaluated., Limitations: Although the high number of included studies and the overall good quality, there was a significant heterogeneity in the collected data., Conclusion: The prevalence and incidence rates of ICLs in subjects undergoing orthodontic treatment are quite high and raise some concerns in terms of risk assessment of orthodontic treatment. ICLs represent an alarming challenge for both patients and professionals. Effective caries prevention strategies during treatment need to be considered and implemented where appropriate., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the European Orthodontic Society.)
- Published
- 2024
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46. Revealing bactericidal events on graphene oxide nano films deposited on metal implant surfaces.
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Schickle K, Gołda-Cępa M, Vuslat-Parlak Z, Grigorev N, Desante G, Chlanda A, Mazuryk O, Neuhaus K, Schmidt C, Amousa N, Drożdż K, Neuss S, Pajerski W, Esteves-Oliveira M, Brzychczy-Włoch M, Kotarba A, and Gonzalez-Julian J
- Subjects
- Reactive Oxygen Species metabolism, Metals pharmacology, Oxygen pharmacology, Staphylococcus aureus, Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacology, Anti-Bacterial Agents chemistry, Graphite
- Abstract
At the time when pathogens are developing robust resistance to antibiotics, the demand for implant surfaces with microbe-killing capabilities has significantly risen. To achieve this goal, profound understanding of the underlying mechanisms is crucial. Our study demonstrates that graphene oxide (GO) nano films deposited on stainless steel (SS316L) exhibit superior antibacterial features. The physicochemical properties of GO itself play a pivotal role in influencing biological events and their diversity may account for the contradictory results reported elsewhere. However, essential properties of GO coatings, such as oxygen content and the resulting electrical conductivity, have been overlooked so far. We hypothesize that the surface potential and electrical resistance of the oxygen content in the GO-nano films may induce bacteria-killing events on conductive metallic substrates. In our study, the GO applied contains 52 wt% of oxygen, and thus exhibits insulating properties. When deposited as a nano film on an electrically conducting steel substrate, GO flakes generate a Schottky barrier at the interface. This barrier, consequently, impedes the transfer of electrons to the underlying conductive substrate. As a result, this creates reactive oxygen species (ROS), leading to bacterial death. We confirmed the presence of GO coatings and their hydrolytic stability by using X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), μRaman spectroscopy, scanning electron microscopy (SEM), and Kelvin probe force microscopy (KPFM) measurements. The biological evaluation was performed on the MG63 osteoblast-like cell line and two selected bacteria species: S. aureus and P. aeruginosa , demonstrating both the cytocompatibility and antibacterial behavior of GO-coated SS316L substrates. We propose a two-step bactericidal mechanism: electron transfer from the bacteria membrane to the substrate, followed by ROS generation. This mechanism finds support in changes observed in contact angle, surface potential, and work function, identified as decisive factors. By addressing overlooked factors and effectively bridging the gap between understanding and practicality, we present a transformative approach for implant surfaces, combating microbial resistance, and offering new application possibilitie.
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- 2024
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47. Enamel Caries Lesion Depth Obtained by Optical Coherence Tomography and Transverse Microradiography: A Comparative Study.
- Author
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Braga AS, Meißner T, Schulz-Kornas E, Haak R, Magalhães AC, and Esteves-Oliveira M
- Subjects
- Animals, Cattle, Imaging, Three-Dimensional methods, Tooth Demineralization diagnostic imaging, Tooth Demineralization pathology, Tomography, Optical Coherence methods, Dental Caries diagnostic imaging, Dental Caries pathology, Microradiography methods, Dental Enamel diagnostic imaging, Dental Enamel pathology
- Abstract
Introduction: Visual imaging of subsurface caries lesions is of vital interest in dentistry, which can be obtained by invasive radiography technique as well as by available non-destructive imaging approaches. Thus, as a first step toward the development of a new innovative approach, Spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT) was applied to detect the lesion depth in comparison to the established reference technique (transverse microradiography [TMR])., Methods: Bovine enamel specimens were demineralized for 5 days, following previous studies. For OCT, the resulting artificial lesions were scanned three-dimensionally (SD-OCT) and semi-automated measured (CarLQuant). For TMR, specimens were sectioned and the lesion depth was manually determined (Inspektor Research System)., Results: The range of lesion depth detected with OCT was 24.0-174.0 μm (mouth rinse study), 18.0-178.0 μm (toothpastes study) and with TMR 59.2-198.0 μm (mouth rinse study), 33.2-133.4 μm (toothpastes study). We found a strong correlation between both methods in terms of lesion depth (Spearman rankwith outlierp < 0.001, Rho = 0.75, Spearman rankwithout outlierp = 0.001, Rho = 0.79). The two methods produce similar results (Passing-Bablok regression, 1.16). As deeper is the lesion, the smallest is the difference between both methods as indicated by Bland-Altman-plots., Conclusion: Especially in the case of deep lesions, the values obtained by both methods are in agreement, and OCT can potentially substitute TMR to detect and assess lesion depth with the benefit of being non-destructive., (© 2024 S. Karger AG, Basel.)
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- 2024
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48. Higher prevalence of dental caries and periodontal problems among refugees: A scoping review.
- Author
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Banihashem Rad SA, Esteves Oliveira M, Maklennan A, Castiglia P, and Campus G
- Subjects
- Adult, Child, Humans, Prevalence, Policy, Dental Caries epidemiology, Refugees
- Abstract
Background: We assessed the prevalence data on oral health diseases, namely dental caries and periodontitis, among refugees and asylum seekers worldwide., Methods: A systematic search of Scopus, Embase, and PubMed retrieved 1225 records; following title and abstract screening, 58 studies remained for full-text eligibility screening based on pre-defined inclusion criteria. Twenty-six studies were included in the review., Results: Dental caries and tooth loss due to caries were high in refugee populations, regardless of their age, gender, or nationality. The adult population had a mean decayed, missing, and filled teeth (DMFT) index score of 9.2 (standard deviation (SD) = 2.3); children had a score of 3.1 (SD = 1.1) for deciduous teeth and 2.5 (SD = 1.1) for permanents. Caries prevalence among refugees ranged from 4.6% to 98.7%, and gingivitis from 5.7% to 100%, indicating a high heterogeneity in their oral health. Regarding oral health accessibility, 17% to 72% of refugees had never been to a dentist, showing a very low level of accessibility to dental health services., Conclusions: Interventions and policies need to be designed to reduce oral health inequalities among refugee populations and asylum seekers, and host countries must implement strategies to increase their access to oral health care. Existing data should be used to set priorities for improving the oral health of refugees., Registration: Open Science Framework: https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/SU59K., Competing Interests: Disclosure of interest: The authors completed the ICMJE Disclosure of Interest Form (available upon request from the corresponding author) and disclose no relevant interests., (Copyright © 2023 by the Journal of Global Health. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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49. Partial Pulpotomy in Young Permanent Teeth: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.
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Camoni N, Cagetti MG, Cirio S, Esteves-Oliveira M, and Campus G
- Abstract
The aim of the present systematic review was to evaluate the clinical and radiographic success of partial pulpotomies in deep caries processes or post-eruptive defects in young, vital permanent teeth. Four electronic databases, PubMed, Scopus, Embase, and Google Scholar, were searched, followed by a manual search in the reference lists. Randomized controlled trials evaluating partial pulpotomy with a follow-up period of ≥12 months were included. A meta-analysis using a random effects model was performed. A total of 3127 articles were retrieved, and after duplicate removal, 2642 were screened by title and abstract; 1 additional article was found during the manual search, and 79 were identified. Finally, six papers were included in the review. Regardless of the partial pulpotomy modalities or material used, there were no significant differences between clinical and radiographic success rates (cumulative success rate 91.8-92.3%). Five studies were included in the meta-analysis that did not indicate any statistically significant differences in success rates when mineral trioxide aggregate was compared to other materials (95% confidence interval: 0.239 to 1.016; p = 0.055). The present research systematically evaluates the evidence and summarizes the available data on partial pulpotomy in young permanent teeth. Given its high clinical and radiographic success rate, partial pulpotomy should be considered when vital pulpal therapy needs to be performed in highly damaged young permanent teeth, as this procedure provides a biological benefit and allows more invasive endodontic treatments to be postponed.
- Published
- 2023
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50. Design, development and validation of a questionnaire to assess dentists' knowledge and experience in diagnosing, recording, and managing root caries.
- Author
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Niemeyer SH, Maniewicz S, Campus G, Tennert C, Yilmaz B, Zekeridou A, Roccuzzo A, Esteves-Oliveira M, Carvalho TS, and Wierichs RJ
- Subjects
- Humans, Aged, Reproducibility of Results, Surveys and Questionnaires, Translating, Dentists, Root Caries
- Abstract
Objectives: The prevalence of root caries is increasing globally, especially in the elderly population, and even though the number of patients with root caries lesions is augmenting, there are still many discrepancies in how dentists manage this condition. The present study aimed to develop and validate a questionnaire to evaluate how dentists diagnose, record and manage root caries lesions, and to verify the validity and reliability of this questionnaire., Materials and Methods: An expert panel developed a self-administered questionnaire survey with three domains: (1) dentists' knowledge on diagnosis, recording, and managing root caries; (2) information about their current general clinical routines; (3) their demographics. The original English [E] version was translated into three different languages (French [F], German [G], Italian [I]), and subsequently back-translated into English by independent dentists. For the validation, 82 dentists (20-22 for each of the translated versions) accepted to answer the questionnaire at two different time-points (with 1-week interval). The data was quality checked. Construct validity, internal reliability, and intra-class correlation (ICC) were assessed., Results: Seventy-seven dentists completed the questionnaire twice [E: 17; F: 19; G: 19; I: 22]. The mean ICC (standard deviation) was 0.98(0.03) for E, 0.90(0.12) for F, 0.98 (0.04) for G, and 0.98 (0.01) for I. Overall, the test-retest reliability was excellent (mean ICC (SD): 0.96 (0.08)). Furthermore, the questionnaire demonstrated good internal reliability (inter-observer reliability; Fleiss kappa: overall:0.27(fair); E:0.30 (fair); F: 0.33(fair); G: 0.33(fair); I: 0.89 (almost perfect))., Conclusion: The questionnaire was validated and is suitable to be used in the four languages to assess the knowledge of dentists on diagnosing, recording and managing root caries., Clinical Significance: The present questionnaire was validated and seems to be a good tool to evaluate how dentists diagnose, record, and manage root caries lesions both in its original (English) and its translated (French, German, and Italian) versions., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2023
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