368 results on '"Wegehaupt, Florian J'
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2. Cleaning performance of electric toothbrushes around brackets applying different brushing forces: an in-vitro study
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Reto L. Rominger, Raphael Patcas, Blend Hamza, Marc Schätzle, Florian J. Wegehaupt, and Monika A. Hersberger-Zurfluh
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Throughout treatment with fixed orthodontic appliances, effective plaque control is crucial to maintaining dental health. This in-vitro study evaluated the cleaning performance of eleven different brush heads of seven electric toothbrushes (oscillating-rotating and sonic motions) and varying brushing forces around orthodontic brackets. Six Mini Diamond® Twin brackets were placed on black-stained front teeth. Teeth were coated with white titanium oxide and brushed in a machine six times for one minute with two different brushing forces (1 N and 1.5 N). Eleven different brush heads were evaluated (either oscillating-rotating or sonic movements). The teeth were scanned and planimetrically evaluated after brushing. Three detailed plaque areas (DPAs) were created: proximal ( 2 mm to bracket). The proportion of contaminated proximal, mid-tier, and distant surfaces (white regions) in relation to the respective DPA was calculated. Independent of brushing forces, places with a higher distance (> 2 mm) to the orthodontic bracket had the least amount of residual contamination, followed by areas with a minor (1–2 mm) and proximal distance (
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- 2024
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3. A laboratory pilot study on voids in flowable bulk-fill composite restorations in bovine Class-II and endodontic access cavities after sonic vibration
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Philipp Körner, Sandra C. Gerber, Cindy Gantner, Blend Hamza, Florian J. Wegehaupt, Thomas Attin, and Shengjile Deari
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract This pilot study investigated whether sonic-powered application of a bulk-fill resin-based composite (RBC) in Class-II or endodontic access cavities reduces void formation. The crowns and roots of 60 bovine teeth with Class-II cavities (C) and endodontic access cavities (E) respectively, were assigned to ten groups (C1–C5, E1–E5). Cavities were filled with RBC (SDR flow + , one increment) using different application techniques: no adaptation (C1 + E1), spreading of RBC on the cavity surfaces with a dental explorer tip (C2 + E2), low (C3 + E3) or high frequency (C4 + E4) direct activation by inserting a sonic-powered tip into RBC and high frequency indirect activation with an ultrasonic insertion tip (C5 + E5). The restorations were light-cured and investigated for voids using microtomography. The number of voids and percentage of voids related to the volume were statistically analysed (α 0.05). The percentage of voids showed no differences in E1-E5 (p > 0.05). C4 showed a significantly higher percentage of voids compared to C2 (p
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- 2023
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4. A laboratory pilot study on voids in flowable bulk-fill composite restorations in bovine Class-II and endodontic access cavities after sonic vibration
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Körner, Philipp, Gerber, Sandra C., Gantner, Cindy, Hamza, Blend, Wegehaupt, Florian J., Attin, Thomas, and Deari, Shengjile
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- 2023
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5. Diamond particles in toothpastes: in-vitro effect on the abrasive enamel wear
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Blend Hamza, Aralia Abdulahad, Thomas Attin, and Florian J. Wegehaupt
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Diamond particles ,Toothpaste ,Abrasive enamel wear ,Abrasives ,Preventive dentistry ,Dentistry ,RK1-715 - Abstract
Abstract Background Diamond particles have recently been used as abrasives in toothpastes, which raises questions about its abrasive behaviour towards enamel. This study was carried out to investigate the abrasive enamel wear caused by three diamond-loaded toothpastes (Candida White Diamond: CWD, Swiss Smile Diamond Glow: SSDG, Emoform F Diamond: EFD) and to compare it with a traditional toothpaste with silica abrasive (Colgate Total Original CTO). Methods Eighty bovine enamel samples were divided into four groups (n = 20) and brushed for 21,600 cycles (60 cycles/min) for 6 h at 2.5-N brushing force. The abrasive enamel wear was recorded with a contact profilometer. The median and interquartile range (IQR) of the abrasive enamel wear was calculated in each group. Pairwise comparisons were conducted using Wilcoxon signed rank exact test and the p value was adjusted according to Holm. Significance level was set at 0.05. Results Diamond-loaded toothpastes caused statistically significantly higher abrasive wear than the traditional toothpaste (p
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- 2022
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6. Influence of pretreatments on microtensile bond strength to eroded dentin using a universal adhesive in self-etch mode
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Hartz, Julia J., Keller, Sarina P., Tauböck, Tobias T., Attin, Thomas, and Wegehaupt, Florian J.
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- 2022
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7. Effect of the toothbrush tuft arrangement and bristle stiffness on the abrasive dentin wear
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Blend Hamza, Maria Niedzwiecki, Philipp Körner, Thomas Attin, and Florian J. Wegehaupt
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract The geometrical properties of toothbrushes play a role in developing abrasive tooth wear and non-carious cervical lesions. This study investigated the interplay between the toothbrush tuft arrangement (crossed vs. parallel) and bristle stiffness (soft vs. medium) on the abrasive dentin wear using three slurries with different levels of abrasivity (RDA: 67, 121 and 174). Twelve groups of bovine dentin samples (n = 20) were brushed with a combination of the aforementioned variables. Abrasive dentin wear was recorded with a profilometer and the resulting abrasive wear of each group was calculated and compared with each other using two-way ANOVA and pairwise tests. Toothbrushes with parallel tuft arrangement caused statistically significantly higher dentin wear compared to crossed tuft arrangement, regardless of the abrasivity level of the used slurry and the bristle stiffness. Soft crossed tuft toothbrushes caused statistically significantly higher abrasive dentin wear than medium crossed tuft toothbrushes, while soft and medium parallel tuft toothbrushes caused the same amounts of dentin wear, regardless of the RDA value of the used slurry. These results could be helpful for dentists and dental hygienists when advising patients. Crossed tuft toothbrushes could be a less-abrasive choice in comparison to parallel tuft toothbrushes.
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- 2022
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8. Diamond particles in toothpastes: in-vitro effect on the abrasive enamel wear
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Hamza, Blend, Abdulahad, Aralia, Attin, Thomas, and Wegehaupt, Florian J.
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- 2022
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9. Effect of the toothbrush tuft arrangement and bristle stiffness on the abrasive dentin wear
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Hamza, Blend, Niedzwiecki, Maria, Körner, Philipp, Attin, Thomas, and Wegehaupt, Florian J.
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- 2022
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10. Adhesive application before hydrofluoric acid etching during repair procedure in dentistry?
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Hartz, Julia J., Zeig, Tajana, Attin, Thomas, and Wegehaupt, Florian J.
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- 2021
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11. Cariogenic potential of oral nutritional supplements measured by intraoral plaque pH telemetry
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Stillhart, Angela, Wegehaupt, Florian J., Nitschke, Ina, Attin, Thomas, and Srinivasan, Murali
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- 2021
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12. Potential of different fluoride gels to prevent erosive tooth wear caused by gastroesophageal reflux
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Philipp Körner, Luca Georgis, Daniel B. Wiedemeier, Thomas Attin, and Florian J. Wegehaupt
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Dental erosion ,Erosive tooth wear ,Gastroesophageal reflux disease ,Erosion protection ,Fluoride gel ,Dentistry ,RK1-715 - Abstract
Abstract Background This in-vitro-study aimed to evaluate the potential of different fluoride gels to prevent gastroesophageal reflux induced erosive tooth wear. Methods Surface baseline profiles of a total of 50 bovine enamel specimens [randomly assigned to five groups (G1–5)] were recorded. All specimens were positioned in a custom made artificial oral cavity and perfused with artificial saliva (0.5 ml/min). Reflux was simulated 11 times a day during 12 h by adding HCl (pH 3.0) for 30 s (flow rate 2 ml/min). During the remaining 12 h (overnight), specimens were stored in artificial saliva and brushed twice a day (morning and evening) with a toothbrush and toothpaste slurry (15 brushing strokes). While specimens in the control group (G1) did not receive any further treatment, specimens in G2–5 were coated with different fluoride gels [Elmex Gelée (G2); Paro Amin Fluor Gelée (G3); Paro Fluor Gelée Natriumfluorid (G4); Sensodyne ProSchmelz Fluorid Gelée (G5)] in the evening for 30 s. After 20 days, surface profiles were recorded again and enamel loss was determined by comparing them with the baseline profiles. The results were statistically analysed using one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) followed by Tukey`s HSD post-hoc test. Results The overall highest mean wear of enamel (9.88 ± 1.73 µm) was observed in the control group (G1), where no fluoride gel was applied. It was significantly higher (p 0.999) showed the overall best protection from hydrochloric acid induced erosion. Enamel wear in G5 (6.64 ± 0.86 µm) was significantly higher compared to G2 (p = 0.028) and G4 (p = 0.047). Conclusions After 20 days of daily application, all investigated fluoride gels are able to significantly reduce gastroesophageal reflux induced loss of enamel.
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- 2021
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13. Erosive loss of tooth substance is dependent on enamel surface structure and presence of pellicle – An in vitro study
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Steiger-Ronay, Valerie, Kuster, Irina M., Wiedemeier, Daniel B., Attin, Thomas, and Wegehaupt, Florian J.
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- 2020
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14. Effect of Toothbrush Bristle Stiffness and Brushing Force on Cleaning Efficacy.
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Tanner, Moritz, Singh, Raphael, Svellenti, Leonardo, Hamza, Blend, Attin, Thomas, and Wegehaupt, Florian J.
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TOOTHBRUSHES ,ABRASIVE machining ,CLEANING ,BROOMS & brushes ,DENTIN - Abstract
Purpose: This study investigated the effect of toothbrush bristle stiffness and brushing force on the cleaning efficacy in vitro. Materials and Methods: Eighty bovine dentin samples were allocated to eight groups (n=10). Two custom-made toothbrushes of different bristle stiffness (soft and medium) were tested at four different brushing forces (1, 2, 3 and 4 N). Dentin samples were stained in black tea and brushed (60 strokes/min) for a total of 25 min in a brushing machine with an abrasive solution (RDA 67). Photographs were taken after 2 and 25 min of brushing time. Cleaning efficacy was measured planimetrically. Results: After 2 min of brushing, the soft-bristle toothbrush did not cause statistically significantly different cleaning efficacy at different brushing forces, while the medium-bristle toothbrush cleaned statistically significantly less efficaceously only at 1 N. Comparing the two different toothbrushes, higher cleaning efficacy was observed only at 1 N for the soft-bristle brush. At 25 min brushing time, the soft-bristle cleaned statistically significantly better at 4 N compared to 1 N and 2 N and at 3 N compared to 1 N. Using the medium-bristle, cleaning efficacy increased with increasing brushing force. After 25 min of brushing, no statistically significant difference was observed between the two different toothbrushes. Conclusion: Irrespective the brushing force, the use of a soft or medium toothbrush results in comparable cleaning efficacy. At 2 min brushing time, increasing the brushing force does not increase the cleaning efficacy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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15. Dentin Loss and Surface Alteration Through Chemical and Chemomechanical Challenge after Initial Root Instrumentation.
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Frey, Adrian Christian, Gubler, Andrea, Schmidlin, Patrick R., and Wegehaupt, Florian J.
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DENTIN ,ERYTHRITOL ,SURFACE roughness ,AIR flow ,ULTRASONICS - Abstract
Purpose: To assess the root surface roughness and substance loss induced by chemical and chemomechanical challenges on root surfaces pretreated with ultrasonic instrumentation, a hand scaler, or erythritol airflow. Materials and Methods: One hundred twenty (120) bovine dentin specimens were used in this study. Specimens were divided into eight groups and treated as follows: groups 1 and 2: polished with 2000- and 4000-grit carborundum papers but not instrumented ('untreated'); groups 3 and 4: hand scaler; groups 5 and 6: ultrasonic instrumentation; groups 7 and 8: erythritol airflow. Samples from groups 1, 3, 5, and 7 then underwent a chemical challenge (5 x 2 min HCl [pH 2.7]), whereas samples from groups 2, 4, 6, and 8 were subjected to a chemomechanical challenge (5 x 2 min HCl [pH 2.7] + 2 min brushing). Surface roughness and substance loss were measured profilometrically. Results: The least substance loss through chemomechanical challenge was noted after erythritol airflow treatment (4.65 ± 0.93 μm), followed by ultrasonic instrumentation (7.30 ± 1.42 μm) and the hand scaler (8.30 ± 1.38 μm); the last two (hand scaler and ultrasonic tip) did not differ statistically significantly. The highest roughness after chemomechanical challenge was observed on ultrasonically treated specimens (1.25 ± 0.85 μm), followed by hand-scaled specimens (0.24 ± 0.16 μm) and those subject to erythritol airflow (0.18 ± 0.09 μm); there was no statistically signficant difference between the latter two, but they both differed statistically significantly from the ultrasonically treated specimens. No statistically significant difference in substance loss through the chemical challenge was observed between specimens pretreated by the hand scaler (0.75 ± 0.15 μm), ultrasonic tip (0.65 ± 0.15 μm), and erythritol airflow (0.75 ± 0.15 μm). The chemical challenge smoothed the surfaces treated with the hand scaler, ultrasonic tip, and erythritol airflow. Conclusion: Dentin pretreatment with erythritol powder airflow resulted in a higher resistance to chemomechanical challenge than did dentin treated ultrasonically or with the hand scaler. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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16. Abrasive Enamel and Dentin Wear Resulting from Brushing with Toothpastes with Highly Discrepant Relative Enamel Abrasivity (REA) and Relative Dentin Abrasivity (RDA) Values.
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Dobler, Liana, Hamza, Blend, Attin, Thomas, and Wegehaupt, Florian J.
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DENTIN ,DENTAL enamel ,TOOTHPASTE ,WILCOXON signed-rank test ,FRETTING corrosion - Abstract
Purpose: To investigate the absolute wear caused by toothpastes with highly discrepant REA (Relative Enamel Abrasivity) and RDA (Relative Dentin Abrasivity) values on both enamel and dentin: Candida Peppermint (CP; REA: 1; RDA: 42), Colgate Total Original (CTO; REA: 4; RDA: 100), Signal White System (SWS; REA: 8; RDA: 143), and Candida White Diamond (CWD; REA 244; RDA: 12). Materials and Methods: Eighty (80) bovine enamel samples and 80 dentin samples were divided into four groups each (n = 20) and investigated after a 6-h brushing procedure (21,600 cycles, 60 cycles/min, load of 2.5 N) with the four toothpastes. The abrasive enamel and dentin wear were registered using a contact profilometer. The median and interquartile range (IQR) of the abrasive enamel and dentin wear were calculated for each group. Pairwise comparisons were conducted using the Wilcoxon signed-rank exact test, and the p-value was adjusted according to Holm (statistical significance set at 0.05). Results: CWD led to the highest abrasive enamel wear (9.86 μm [5.77]). CTO caused the highest abrasive dentin wear (166.70 μm [69.90]), being statistically significantly higher than the wear for CP (54.20 μm [24.00]) and CWD (17.00 μm [7.80]) (p = 0.00001). The abrasive dentin wear for CWD was statistically significantly lower in comparison to all other groups (p = 0.00001). Conclusion: Toothpastes with highly discrepant REA and RDA values presented statistically significantly different absolute wear on enamel and dentin. REA and RDA values should both be declared for every toothpaste. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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17. Supplementation of Energy Drinks with Green Tea Extract: Effect on In Vitro Abrasive/Erosive Dentin Wear.
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Blatter, Nicolai, Hamza, Blend, Attin, Thomas, and Wegehaupt, Florian J.
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TEA extracts ,GREEN tea ,ENERGY drinks ,CLEAN energy ,DENTIN - Abstract
Purpose: To investigate the effect of the supplementation of energy drinks with green tea extract on abrasive and erosive dentin wear. Materials and Methods: Six groups, each comprising 15 bovine dentin samples, were prepared, yielding a total of 90 samples. Erosion was performed by immersing the samples in Red Bull and Red Bull light with and without green tea extract. Tap water with and without green tea extract was used as the control groups. The samples were subjected to abrasive/erosive cycling for five days. The following cycling was performed daily: toothbrush abrasion (20 brushstrokes; 2.5 N); eight erosive cycles (2 min storage in the respective solutions); in between the erosive cycles, storage in artificial saliva (60 min) and again toothbrush abrasion (20 brushstrokes; 2.5 N). During the night, samples were again stored in artificial saliva. Abrasive/erosive dentin wear was measured using a stylus profilometer (μm, accuracy = 40 nm). The measured dentin loss results from the vertical position shift on the y-axis from base to final profile after the wear process in 2D. Pairwise comparisons between the groups were carried out using Wilcoxon signed-rank test. Results: The following dentin wear (median [IQR]) was measured: Red Bull: 1.9 μm (0.5); Red Bull Light: 1.3 μm (0.3); Red Bull with green tea extract: 0.8 μm (0.3); Red Bull Light with green tea extract: 0.3 μm (0.5); Tap water with green tea extract: -0.2 μm (0.7); Tap water: -1.0 μm (1.2). The comparison of all tested groups to each other proved to be statistically significant (p < 0.05). Conclusion: The supplementation of energy drinks with green tea extract provide a protective effect against erosive/ abrasive wear in vitro. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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18. Potential of different fluoride gels to prevent erosive tooth wear caused by gastroesophageal reflux
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Körner, Philipp, Georgis, Luca, Wiedemeier, Daniel B., Attin, Thomas, and Wegehaupt, Florian J.
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- 2021
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19. Pure hydroxyapatite as a substitute for enamel in erosion experiments
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Ronay, Franz C., Wegehaupt, Florian J., Becker, Klaus, Wiedemeier, Daniel B., Attin, Thomas, Lussi, Adrian, and Steiger-Ronay, Valerie
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- 2019
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20. Quantitative measurements of aerosols from air-polishing and ultrasonic devices: (How) can we protect ourselves?
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Manuela Kaufmann, Alex Solderer, Andrea Gubler, Florian J Wegehaupt, Thomas Attin, and Patrick R Schmidlin
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
AimTo assess the distribution and deposition of aerosols during simulated periodontal therapy.MethodsA manikin with simulated fluorescein salivation was treated by four experienced dentists applying two different periodontal treatment options, i.e. air-polishing with an airflow device or ultrasonic scaling in the upper and lower anterior front for 5 minutes, respectively. Aerosol deposition was quantitatively measured on 21 pre-defined locations with varying distances to the manikins mouth in triplicates using absorbent filter papers.ResultsThe selected periodontal interventions resulted in different contamination levels around the patient's mouth. The highest contamination could be measured on probes on the patient's chest and forehead but also on the practitioner's glove. With increasing distance to the working site contamination of the probes decreased with both devices. Air-polishing led to greater contamination than ultrasonic.ConclusionBoth devices showed contamination of the nearby structures, less contamination was detected when using the ultrasonic. Affirming the value of wearing protective equipment we support the need for universal barrier precautions and effective routine infection control in dental practice.
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- 2020
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21. OralDisk: A Chair-Side Compatible Molecular Platform Using Whole Saliva for Monitoring Oral Health at the Dental Practice
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Desirée Baumgartner, Benita Johannsen, Mara Specht, Jan Lüddecke, Markus Rombach, Sebastian Hin, Nils Paust, Felix von Stetten, Roland Zengerle, Christopher Herz, Johannes R. Peham, Pune N. Paqué, Thomas Attin, Joël S. Jenzer, Philipp Körner, Patrick R. Schmidlin, Thomas Thurnheer, Florian J. Wegehaupt, Wendy E. Kaman, Andrew Stubbs, John P. Hays, Viorel Rusu, Alex Michie, Thomas Binsl, David Stejskal, Michal Karpíšek, Kai Bao, Nagihan Bostanci, Georgios N. Belibasakis, and Konstantinos Mitsakakis
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dental practice ,point-of-care diagnostics ,treatment monitoring ,oral health ,periodontitis ,caries ,Biotechnology ,TP248.13-248.65 - Abstract
Periodontitis and dental caries are two major bacterially induced, non-communicable diseases that cause the deterioration of oral health, with implications in patients’ general health. Early, precise diagnosis and personalized monitoring are essential for the efficient prevention and management of these diseases. Here, we present a disk-shaped microfluidic platform (OralDisk) compatible with chair-side use that enables analysis of non-invasively collected whole saliva samples and molecular-based detection of ten bacteria: seven periodontitis-associated (Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans, Campylobacter rectus, Fusobacterium nucleatum, Prevotella intermedia, Porphyromonas gingivalis, Tannerella forsythia, Treponema denticola) and three caries-associated (oral Lactobacilli, Streptococcus mutans, Streptococcus sobrinus). Each OralDisk test required 400 µL of homogenized whole saliva. The automated workflow included bacterial DNA extraction, purification and hydrolysis probe real-time PCR detection of the target pathogens. All reagents were pre-stored within the disk and sample-to-answer processing took < 3 h using a compact, customized processing device. A technical feasibility study (25 OralDisks) was conducted using samples from healthy, periodontitis and caries patients. The comparison of the OralDisk with a lab-based reference method revealed a ~90% agreement amongst targets detected as positive and negative. This shows the OralDisk’s potential and suitability for inclusion in larger prospective implementation studies in dental care settings.
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- 2021
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22. Effect of Toothbrush Bristle Stiffness and Brushing Force on Cleaning Efficacy
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Tanner, Moritz Lino, Singh, Raphael, Svellenti, Leonardo, Hamza, Blend; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0493-2553, Attin, Thomas; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6141-1263, Wegehaupt, Florian J; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3972-0561, Tanner, Moritz Lino, Singh, Raphael, Svellenti, Leonardo, Hamza, Blend; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0493-2553, Attin, Thomas; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6141-1263, and Wegehaupt, Florian J; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3972-0561
- Abstract
PURPOSE: This study investigated the effect of toothbrush bristle stiffness and brushing force on the cleaning efficacy in vitro. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Eighty bovine dentin samples were allocated to eight groups (n=10). Two custom-made toothbrushes of different bristle stiffness (soft and medium) were tested at four different brushing forces (1, 2, 3 and 4 N). Dentin samples were stained in black tea and brushed (60 strokes/min) for a total of 25 min in a brushing machine with an abrasive solution (RDA 67). Photographs were taken after 2 and 25 min of brushing time. Cleaning efficacy was measured planimetrically. RESULTS: After 2 min of brushing, the soft-bristle toothbrush did not cause statistically significantly different cleaning efficacy at different brushing forces, while the medium-bristle toothbrush cleaned statistically significantly less efficaceously only at 1 N. Comparing the two different toothbrushes, higher cleaning efficacy was observed only at 1 N for the soft-bristle brush. At 25 min brushing time, the soft-bristle cleaned statistically significantly better at 4 N compared to 1 N and 2 N and at 3 N compared to 1 N. Using the medium-bristle, cleaning efficacy increased with increasing brushing force. After 25 min of brushing, no statistically significant difference was observed between the two different toothbrushes. CONCLUSION: Irrespective the brushing force, the use of a soft or medium toothbrush results in comparable cleaning efficacy. At 2 min brushing time, increasing the brushing force does not increase the cleaning efficacy.
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- 2023
23. Relative dentin and enamel abrasivity of charcoal toothpastes
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Zoller, Manuel J; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1124-3521, Hamza, Blend; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0493-2553, Cucuzza, Claudia, Gubler, Andrea, Attin, Thomas; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6141-1263, Wegehaupt, Florian J; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3972-0561, Zoller, Manuel J; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1124-3521, Hamza, Blend; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0493-2553, Cucuzza, Claudia, Gubler, Andrea, Attin, Thomas; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6141-1263, and Wegehaupt, Florian J; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3972-0561
- Abstract
Objectives: Very little data are known about charcoal toothpastes. The aim of this study was to counteract the missing data by determining the relative dentin abrasivity (RDA) and relative enamel abrasivity (REA) values of charcoal toothpastes. Methods: Radioactively charged dentin and enamel samples were randomly divided into groups of eight specimens. Each group was brushed with two of total 12 charcoal toothpaste slurries and with a standard abrasive with a known RDA and REA value. The measured radioactivity in counts per minute within the slurries corresponds to the amount of dentin or enamel abraded. RDA and REA values of the charcoal toothpastes were expressed relative to the known value of the standard slurry. Results: The RDA and REA values of the charcoal toothpastes have a broad range of 24-166 and 0-14, respectively. Conclusions: The RDA and REA values do not differ significantly from previously tested commercially available toothpastes. However, the lack of fluoride compounds in many of the investigated charcoal toothpastes can have a less beneficial effect for the consumers. It is very important to educate patients accordingly.
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- 2023
24. Relative dentin and enamel abrasivity of charcoal toothpastes
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Manuel J. Zoller, Blend Hamza, Claudia Cucuzza, Andrea Gubler, Thomas Attin, Florian J. Wegehaupt, and University of Zurich
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10066 Clinic of Conservative and Preventive Dentistry ,610 Medicine & health ,Dentistry (miscellaneous) ,10067 Clinic for Orthodontics and Pediatric Dentistry - Abstract
Very little data are known about charcoal toothpastes. The aim of this study was to counteract the missing data by determining the relative dentin abrasivity (RDA) and relative enamel abrasivity (REA) values of charcoal toothpastes.Radioactively charged dentin and enamel samples were randomly divided into groups of eight specimens. Each group was brushed with two of total 12 charcoal toothpaste slurries and with a standard abrasive with a known RDA and REA value. The measured radioactivity in counts per minute within the slurries corresponds to the amount of dentin or enamel abraded. RDA and REA values of the charcoal toothpastes were expressed relative to the known value of the standard slurry.The RDA and REA values of the charcoal toothpastes have a broad range of 24-166 and 0-14, respectively.The RDA and REA values do not differ significantly from previously tested commercially available toothpastes. However, the lack of fluoride compounds in many of the investigated charcoal toothpastes can have a less beneficial effect for the consumers. It is very important to educate patients accordingly.
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- 2023
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25. Erosive Potential of Bottled Salad Dressings.
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Hartz, Julia J., Procopio, Alessio, Attin, Thomas, and Wegehaupt, Florian J.
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SALAD dressing ,ORANGE juice ,DRINKING water ,FRETTING corrosion ,TOOTH abrasion - Abstract
Purpose: A previous clinical study showed that the prevalence of erosive toothwear in vegetarians is statistically significantly higher than in nonvegetarians, due to the consumption of vinegar and other acidic foodstuffs. To adequately inform patients, this study investigated the erosive potential of bottled salad dressings available in Switzerland and compared it with that of orange juice. Materials and Methods: One hundred enamel samples of bovine teeth were divided into ten groups. Samples were placed in 1 of 9 bottled salad dressings or orange juice (Granini) for 2 min. Afterwards, they were rinsed with Zürich tap water for 30 s, followed by abrasion with a toothbrush for 20 brush strokes and a toothpaste-saliva mixture. Erosive/abrasive enamel wear was determined with contact profilometry after 40 cycles. Results: The enamel wear (median/IQR) caused by Tradition Sauce Balsamique (9.5 µm/5.3 µm), M-Classic Dressing Italiano (10.9 µm/12.3 µm), Betty Bossi Balsamico Dressing (9.4 µm/4.5 µm) and Thomy Balsamico Vinaigrette Dressing (14.2 µm/6.5 µm) was statistically significantly higher than that caused by orange juice (2.4 µm/0.8 µm). Enamel wear caused by M-Classic Dressing French Joghurt (0.2 µm/0.2 µm) and Coop Qualité & Prix French Dressing (1.2 µm/1.0 µm) was statistically significantly lower compared to that of orange juice. Conclusions: The pure balsamico vinegar-based dressings (Italian type) showed a statistically significantly higher erosive potential than orange juice, whereas dressings containing calcium-rich products (enriched with milk and/or cream) (French-type) caused lower enamel wear than orange juice. The study shows that some bottled dressings have erosive potential even higher than orange juice and patients should be informed accordingly. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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26. Interplay Between the In-Vitro Cleaning Performance and Wear of Manual Toothbrushes
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Zoller, Manuel J, Lasance, Florance A, Hamza, Blend, Attin, Thomas, Wegehaupt, Florian J, and University of Zurich
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10066 Clinic of Conservative and Preventive Dentistry ,610 Medicine & health ,10067 Clinic for Orthodontics and Pediatric Dentistry - Published
- 2022
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27. Salivary Flow Rate During Toothbrushing
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Anina M, Pulfer, Thomas, Attin, and Florian J, Wegehaupt
- Subjects
Toothbrushing ,Fluorides ,Humans ,Diamines ,Toothpastes - Abstract
To determine the salivary flow rate and subsequent dilution of toothpaste and assess the pH of oral fluids during toothbrushing with toothpastes of various pHs.The study was conducted as an in-vivo trial involving 30 healthy volunteers. The participants took part in a series of trials distributed over four appointments. After a screening check, in which the participants' stimulated and unstimulated salivary flow rate and buffering capacities were determined, four test series involving toothbrushing were conducted. Participants brushed their teeth using a manual toothbrush for 2 min: once without toothpaste and three times using toothpastes of varying pHs. The salivary flow rate and subsequent dilution of the toothpaste was determined. Additionally, the pH of the collected oral fluid was analysed.Brushing teeth with toothpaste caused a statistically significant increase in salivary flow rate (median/IQR in ml/min) (Elmex Kariesschutz 3.29/1.36, Colgate Total Original 3.23/1.08, Elmex Sensitive Professional 3.18/1.39) when compared to brushing teeth using a manual toothbrush without toothpaste (1.85/0.78) (p0.05). The variation in pH of the oral fluid samples was dictated primarily by the pH of the toothpaste used.The salivary flow rate when brushing using toothpaste was similar across all tested toothpastes, independent of pH, and had an average median of 3.23 ml/min. The dilution of 1 g of toothpaste during a standard toothbrushing procedure of 2 min is therefore approximately at a ratio of one part toothpaste to 6.5 parts saliva.
- Published
- 2022
28. Interplay Between the In-Vitro Cleaning Performance and Wear of Manual Toothbrushes
- Author
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Manuel J, Zoller, Florance A, Lasance, Blend, Hamza, Thomas, Attin, and Florian J, Wegehaupt
- Subjects
Toothbrushing ,Titanium ,Dental Plaque ,Humans ,Animals ,Cattle ,Equipment Design - Abstract
This in-vitro study deals with the question of whether the wear and tear of the manual toothbrush over a simulated timeframe up to 24 months has an effect on its cleaning performance. The purpose was to find indications as to whether and when a toothbrush needs to be replaced based on its cleaning performance.Models equipped with artificial teeth (coated with titanium dioxide) were brushed in-vitro using a brushing machine with clamped manual toothbrushes. The machine carried out even, horizontal brush strokes (120 brush strokes/min) for 1 min with a constant contact pressure of 2.5 N. The percentage of the area of titanium dioxide removed from the buccal, mesial and distal surfaces of the artificial teeth corresponded to the cleaning performance. The manual toothbrushes were used on bovine roots to simulate the wear and tear after 2, 4, 6, 12, 18, 24 months of use. The cleaning performance was re-evaluated after each simulated timepoint of wear. In addition, the brushes were photographed after each cycle.An increase in the in-vitro cleaning performance of the toothbrush was observed up to 6 months of wear compared to the starting point. After that, the cleaning performance decreased somewhat, but always remained above the initial cleaning performance.Based on the in-vitro cleaning performance after 24 months, the toothbrush would not have to be replaced. However, this in-vitro study cannot determine when a toothbrush should be replaced, because in-vivo it is also dependent on a variety of other factors such as fraying and microbial colonisation. Direct transfer of results from this study to everyday clinical practice is therefore difficult.
- Published
- 2022
29. Salivary Flow Rate During Toothbrushing
- Author
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Pulfer, Anina M, Attin, Thomas, Wegehaupt, Florian J, and University of Zurich
- Subjects
3503 Dental Hygiene ,10066 Clinic of Conservative and Preventive Dentistry ,610 Medicine & health - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Relative dentin and enamel abrasivity of charcoal toothpastes
- Author
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Zoller, Manuel J., primary, Hamza, Blend, additional, Cucuzza, Claudia, additional, Gubler, Andrea, additional, Attin, Thomas, additional, and Wegehaupt, Florian J., additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Impact of erosive conditions on tooth-colored restorative materials
- Author
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Attin, Thomas and Wegehaupt, Florian J.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. RDA and REA Values of Commercially Available Toothpastes Utilising Diamond Powder and Traditional Abrasives.
- Author
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Hamza, Blend, Attin, Thomas, Cucuzza, Claudia, Gubler, Andrea, and Wegehaupt, Florian J.
- Subjects
TOOTHPASTE ,ABRASIVES ,POWDERS ,DIAMONDS ,DENTAL enamel ,ANIMALS ,CARBON ,CATTLE ,DENTIFRICES ,DENTIN ,TOOTH abrasion ,TOOTH care & hygiene - Abstract
Purpose: To investigate whether toothpastes with diamond powder vs those with traditional abrasives abrade dentin and enamel differently and to determine the relative dentin abrasivity (RDA) and relative enamel abrasivity (REA) values of those toothpastes.Materials and Methods: Dentin and enamel samples of bovine permanent incisors were randomly allocated into groups of eight, brushed with 20 different toothpastes (three of which contained diamond powder) and analysed for their RDA and REA values.Results: Toothpastes with diamond powder exhibit low RDA values but high REA values. Some RDA values exceeded the ones declared by the manufacturer.Conclusion: Diamond powder as an abrasive might have a mild action on dentin, but it is highly abrasive on enamel. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Dentin Abrasivity and Cleaning Efficacy of Novel/Alternative Toothpastes.
- Author
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Hamza, Blend, Tanner, Moritz, Attin, Thomas, and Wegehaupt, Florian J.
- Subjects
DENTIN ,TOOTHPASTE ,ARTIFICIAL saliva ,SEA salt ,FRETTING corrosion ,DENTIFRICES ,TOOTH abrasion ,CATTLE ,TOOTH care & hygiene ,ANIMALS - Abstract
Purpose: To investigate dentin abrasivity and cleaning efficacy of novel/alternative toothpastes containing diamond particles, active carbon, sea salt or organic oils.Materials and Methods: Seventy-two bovine dentin samples (for measuring abrasivity) and 60 human dentin samples (for assessing cleaning efficacy) were used in this study. Samples were divided into six groups as follows: group 1: Elmex Kariesschutz (hydrated silica); group 2: Lavera Neutral Zahngel (sea salt); group 3: Curaprox Black is White (active carbon); group 4: Swiss Smile Diamond Glow (diamond powder); group 5: Ringana Fresh Tooth Oil (hydrated silica); and group 6: artificial saliva. Samples were brushed for a total of 26 min at 120 strokes/min, replacing slurries (1 part respective toothpaste and 2 parts artificial saliva) every 2 min. Finally, abrasive dentin wear was measured profilometrically and cleaning efficacy planimetrically.Results: The highest abrasivity values were observed for Lavera Neutral Zahngel (sea salt 9.2 µm) and Elmex Kariesschutz group (hydrated silica 6.0 µm). The lowest abrasivity value was observed for Ringana Fresh Tooth Oil group (hydrated silica 1.3 µm). The highest cleaning efficacy was observed for Elmex Kariesschutz group (86.7%) and the lowest cleaning efficacy was observed for Ringana Fresh Tooth Oil group (31.3%).Conclusion: The addition of diamond powder or active carbon to toothpastes could offer high cleaning efficacy with low dentin abrasivity. The addition of sea salt to traditional abrasives might cause high abrasive dentin wear without adding further cleaning benefit. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Erosive/Abrasive Enamel Wear While Using a Combination of Anti-Erosive Toothbrush/-Paste.
- Author
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Körner, Philipp, Inauen, Deborah S., Attin, Thomas, and Wegehaupt, Florian J.
- Subjects
ANIMALS ,CATTLE ,DENTAL enamel ,DENTIFRICES ,TOOTH abrasion ,TOOTH care & hygiene ,TOOTH erosion - Abstract
Purpose: To investigate dental enamel wear caused by erosion and abrasion while using a combination of anti-erosive toothbrush/-paste.Materials and Methods: A total of 60 enamel specimens from bovine incisors were randomly assigned into five groups of 12 specimens each (G1-5, n = 12): (G1) control group (no treatment), (G2) standard medium toothbrush Paro M43 and standard toothpaste Elmex Caries Protection, (G3) standard medium toothbrush Paro M43 and anti-erosive toothpaste Elmex Protection Erosion, (G4) anti-erosive toothbrush Elmex Erosion Soft and standard toothpaste Elmex Caries Protection, (G5) anti-erosive toothbrush Elmex Erosion Soft and anti-erosive toothpaste Elmex Protection Erosion. Initially, surface baseline profiles were recorded using profilometry. In a total of 60 cycles, all specimens were exposed to hydrochloric acid (pH = 3) for 1 min, rinsed with tap water to stop the erosive attack and brushed according to the specific protocol of each group (15 brushing strokes per run). Enamel loss was determined by comparing the surface profiles before and after 60 cycles and the results were statistically analysed using analysis of variance (ANOVA).Results: The significantly highest loss of enamel was observed in the control group G1(1.4 ± 0.20 µm) (p < 0.001). G2 turned out to be the most abrasive toothbrush/-paste combination (1.12 ± 0.15 µm), G3 the least invasive (0.40 ± 0.04 µm) (p < 0.001, respectively).Conclusion: All combinations of the investigated toothbrushes/-pastes reduce erosive/abrasive enamel wear. However, the highest reduction was observed for the combination of anti-erosive toothpaste and standard toothbrush (G3). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Effect of a sonic toothbrush on the abrasive dentine wear using toothpastes with different abrasivity values
- Author
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Philipp Körner, Blend Hamza, Entoni Uka, Florian J Wegehaupt, Thomas Attin, University of Zurich, and Hamza, Blend
- Subjects
Toothbrushing ,business.product_category ,Dentistry ,610 Medicine & health ,Manual toothbrush ,Bovine dentine ,10067 Clinic for Orthodontics and Pediatric Dentistry ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,law ,10066 Clinic of Conservative and Preventive Dentistry ,Medicine ,In vitro study ,Animals ,Humans ,Dentistry (miscellaneous) ,030212 general & internal medicine ,toothpaste ,abrasive dentine wear ,sonic toothbrush ,Toothpaste ,business.industry ,Abrasive ,030206 dentistry ,Original Articles ,Tooth Abrasion ,3501 Dentistry (miscellaneous) ,manual toothbrush ,Dentin ,Sodium Fluoride ,Original Article ,Cattle ,Toothbrush ,business ,Toothpastes - Abstract
Objective This in vitro study aimed to investigate the effect of a sonic toothbrush on the resulting abrasive dentine wear using toothpastes with different abrasivities compared to the use of a manual toothbrush. Methods Ninety‐six bovine dentine samples were divided into six groups and subjected to a brushing sequence (sonic: 20 min, 0.9 N, 10 strokes/min; manual: 20 min, 1.6 N, 60 strokes/min) as follows: group 1: Elmex Sensitive Plus (RDA = 28) + manual toothbrush; group 2: Elmex Sensitive + sonic toothbrush; group 3: Elmex Kariesschutz (RDA = 65) + manual toothbrush; group 4: Elmex Kariesschutz +sonic toothbrush; group 5: Colgate Total Original (RDA = 121) + manual toothbrush; and group 6: Colgate Total Original +sonic toothbrush. The abrasive dentine wear was measured profilometrically. Results The median (IQR) abrasive dentine wear was as follows: Elmex Sensitive Plus (manual toothbrush: 2.7 µm (0.8), sonic toothbrush: 3.1 µm (1.9)); Elmex Kariesschutz (manual toothbrush: 4.9 µm (1.4), sonic toothbrush: 6.4 µm (2.1)); and Colgate Total Original (manual toothbrush: 5.2 µm (1.1), sonic toothbrush: 9.0 µm (3.1)). Differences in dentine wear between sonic and manual toothbrushes were statistically significant only in the groups brushed with Elmex Kariesschutz and Colgate Total Original (p ≤ 0.05). Conclusion Brushing with a sonic toothbrush could result in a higher abrasive dentine wear compared to manual toothbrush when combined with toothpastes with high abrasivity values.
- Published
- 2021
36. Interplay Between the In-Vitro Cleaning Performance and Wear of Manual Toothbrushes
- Author
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Zoller, Manuel J; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1124-3521, Lasance, Florance A, Hamza, Blend; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0493-2553, Attin, Thomas; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6141-1263, Wegehaupt, Florian J; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3972-0561, Zoller, Manuel J; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1124-3521, Lasance, Florance A, Hamza, Blend; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0493-2553, Attin, Thomas; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6141-1263, and Wegehaupt, Florian J; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3972-0561
- Abstract
PURPOSE: This in-vitro study deals with the question of whether the wear and tear of the manual toothbrush over a simulated timeframe up to 24 months has an effect on its cleaning performance. The purpose was to find indications as to whether and when a toothbrush needs to be replaced based on its cleaning performance. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Models equipped with artificial teeth (coated with titanium dioxide) were brushed in-vitro using a brushing machine with clamped manual toothbrushes. The machine carried out even, horizontal brush strokes (120 brush strokes/min) for 1 min with a constant contact pressure of 2.5 N. The percentage of the area of titanium dioxide removed from the buccal, mesial and distal surfaces of the artificial teeth corresponded to the cleaning performance. The manual toothbrushes were used on bovine roots to simulate the wear and tear after 2, 4, 6, 12, 18, 24 months of use. The cleaning performance was re-evaluated after each simulated timepoint of wear. In addition, the brushes were photographed after each cycle. RESULTS: An increase in the in-vitro cleaning performance of the toothbrush was observed up to 6 months of wear compared to the starting point. After that, the cleaning performance decreased somewhat, but always remained above the initial cleaning performance. CONCLUSION: Based on the in-vitro cleaning performance after 24 months, the toothbrush would not have to be replaced. However, this in-vitro study cannot determine when a toothbrush should be replaced, because in-vivo it is also dependent on a variety of other factors such as fraying and microbial colonisation. Direct transfer of results from this study to everyday clinical practice is therefore difficult.
- Published
- 2022
37. Diamond particles in toothpastes: in-vitro effect on the abrasive enamel wear
- Author
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Hamza, Blend; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0493-2553, Abdulahad, Aralia, Attin, Thomas; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6141-1263, Wegehaupt, Florian J; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3972-0561, Hamza, Blend; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0493-2553, Abdulahad, Aralia, Attin, Thomas; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6141-1263, and Wegehaupt, Florian J; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3972-0561
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: Diamond particles have recently been used as abrasives in toothpastes, which raises questions about its abrasive behaviour towards enamel. This study was carried out to investigate the abrasive enamel wear caused by three diamond-loaded toothpastes (Candida White Diamond: CWD, Swiss Smile Diamond Glow: SSDG, Emoform F Diamond: EFD) and to compare it with a traditional toothpaste with silica abrasive (Colgate Total Original CTO). METHODS: Eighty bovine enamel samples were divided into four groups (n = 20) and brushed for 21,600 cycles (60 cycles/min) for 6 h at 2.5-N brushing force. The abrasive enamel wear was recorded with a contact profilometer. The median and interquartile range (IQR) of the abrasive enamel wear was calculated in each group. Pairwise comparisons were conducted using Wilcoxon signed rank exact test and the p value was adjusted according to Holm. Significance level was set at 0.05. RESULTS: Diamond-loaded toothpastes caused statistically significantly higher abrasive wear than the traditional toothpaste (p < 0.0001). SSDG caused statistically significantly higher enamel wear (19.0 µm (11.2)) than CWD (8.4 µm (4.6)) and EFD (7.3 µm (3.9)) (p < 0.0001). CONCLUSIONS: Diamond-loaded toothpastes cause higher enamel wear than toothpastes with traditional abrasives and also exhibit different abrasivity behaviour compared to each other.
- Published
- 2022
38. Effect of the toothbrush tuft arrangement and bristle stiffness on the abrasive dentin wear
- Author
-
Hamza, Blend; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0493-2553, Niedzwiecki, Maria, Körner, Philipp; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9254-7112, Attin, Thomas; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6141-1263, Wegehaupt, Florian J; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3972-0561, Hamza, Blend; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0493-2553, Niedzwiecki, Maria, Körner, Philipp; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9254-7112, Attin, Thomas; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6141-1263, and Wegehaupt, Florian J; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3972-0561
- Abstract
The geometrical properties of toothbrushes play a role in developing abrasive tooth wear and non-carious cervical lesions. This study investigated the interplay between the toothbrush tuft arrangement (crossed vs. parallel) and bristle stiffness (soft vs. medium) on the abrasive dentin wear using three slurries with different levels of abrasivity (RDA: 67, 121 and 174). Twelve groups of bovine dentin samples (n = 20) were brushed with a combination of the aforementioned variables. Abrasive dentin wear was recorded with a profilometer and the resulting abrasive wear of each group was calculated and compared with each other using two-way ANOVA and pairwise tests. Toothbrushes with parallel tuft arrangement caused statistically significantly higher dentin wear compared to crossed tuft arrangement, regardless of the abrasivity level of the used slurry and the bristle stiffness. Soft crossed tuft toothbrushes caused statistically significantly higher abrasive dentin wear than medium crossed tuft toothbrushes, while soft and medium parallel tuft toothbrushes caused the same amounts of dentin wear, regardless of the RDA value of the used slurry. These results could be helpful for dentists and dental hygienists when advising patients. Crossed tuft toothbrushes could be a less-abrasive choice in comparison to parallel tuft toothbrushes.
- Published
- 2022
39. The effects of internal tooth bleaching regimens on composite-to-composite bond strength
- Author
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Ferrari, Raphael, Attin, Thomas, Wegehaupt, Florian J., Stawarczyk, Bogna, and Tauböck, Tobias T.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Influence of proximal box elevation on the marginal quality and fracture behavior of root-filled molars restored with CAD/CAM ceramic or composite onlays
- Author
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Ilgenstein, Irina, Zitzmann, Nicola U., Bühler, Julia, Wegehaupt, Florian J., Attin, Thomas, Weiger, Roland, and Krastl, Gabriel
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Effect of cerium chloride application on fibroblast and osteoblast proliferation and differentiation
- Author
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Schmidlin, Patrick R., Tchouboukov, Alexandre, Wegehaupt, Florian J., and Weber, Franz E.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Zahnerosionen im Zusammenhang mit gastroösophagealem Reflux: Ursache, Prävention und restaurative Therapie
- Author
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Thomas Attin, Florian J Wegehaupt, University of Zurich, and Wegehaupt, Florian J
- Subjects
10066 Clinic of Conservative and Preventive Dentistry ,610 Medicine & health ,2700 General Medicine ,General Medicine - Abstract
Zusammenfassung. Dentale Erosionen entstehen durch den wiederkehrenden Kontakt von Lösungen, die an Zahnmineralien ungesättigt sind, mit den Zahnhartsubstanzen. Dieses führt initial zu einer Erweichung und später zu einem irreversiblen Verlust an Zahnhartsubstanzen. Erosionen werden insbesondere beim übermässigen Konsum saurer Lebensmittel (z.B. Softdrinks oder Zitrusfrüchte) aber auch im Zusammenhang mit gastrointestinalen Erkrankungen (gastroösophageale Reflux-Erkrankung) oder psychosomatischen Erkrankung (Anorexia nervosa oder Bulimia nervosa) beobachtet. Ziel des vorliegenden Artikels ist es, dentale Erosionen zu definieren und ihre Ursachen, Prävalenz und Folgen sowie mögliche präventive Massnahmen aufzuzeigen. Anhand eines klinischen Beispiels eines Patienten mit Reflux-bedingten Erosionen wird eine Therapiemöglichkeit mit direktem Kompositaufbauten der Zähne dargestellt.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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43. Wear of conventional and pre-polymerized composite materials under erosive/abrasive conditions
- Author
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Zoller, Manuel J, Attin, Thomas, Wegehaupt, Florian J, and University of Zurich
- Subjects
10066 Clinic of Conservative and Preventive Dentistry ,610 Medicine & health - Published
- 2022
44. Effect of tapered-end and round-end bristles on the abrasive dentine wear applying increasing brushing forces
- Author
-
Hamza, Blend, Svellenti, Leonardo, Körner, Philipp, Attin, Thomas, Wegehaupt, Florian J, University of Zurich, and Hamza, Blend
- Subjects
Toothbrushing ,non ,Analysis of Variance ,Abrasive dentine wear ,tapered ,610 Medicine & health ,General Medicine ,Equipment Design ,10067 Clinic for Orthodontics and Pediatric Dentistry ,3500 General Dentistry ,round ,toothbrush ,carious cervical lesion ,Tooth Abrasion ,end bristles ,10066 Clinic of Conservative and Preventive Dentistry ,Dentin ,Animals ,Humans ,Cattle ,General Dentistry - Abstract
To investigate the effect of toothbrush bristles end configuration on the abrasive dentine wear at different brushing forces.One hundred and sixty bovine dentine samples were randomized into eight groups (Brushing with tapered-end bristles resulted in statistically significantly less abrasive dentine wear than round-end bristles regardless of the applied brushing force (1 N: 4.4 ± 1.5 vs. 7.7 ± 2.0 µm; 2 N: 7.7 ± 2.1 vs. 12.2 ± 2.7 µm; 3 N: 11.3 ± 2.6 vs. 19.4 ± 3.7 µm; 4 N: 11.2 ± 2.1 vs. 25.3 ± 4.8 µm). The interaction between bristle configuration and brushing force was statistically significantly (Tapered-end toothbrushes might be a safer choice for patients, especially when showing signs of non-carious cervical lesion. However, other toothbrush properties should also be considered.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Anti-erosive potential of amine fluoride, cerium chloride and laser irradiation application on dentine
- Author
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Wegehaupt, Florian J., Sener, Beatrice, Attin, Thomas, and Schmidlin, Patrick R.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. A First Study on the Usefulness of Matrix Metalloproteinase 9 from Dentinal Fluid to Indicate Pulp Inflammation
- Author
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Zehnder, Matthias, Wegehaupt, Florian J., and Attin, Thomas
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Effect of tapered-end and round-end bristles on the abrasive dentine wear applying increasing brushing forces
- Author
-
Hamza, Blend, primary, Svellenti, Leonardo, additional, Körner, Philipp, additional, Attin, Thomas, additional, and Wegehaupt, Florian J., additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Wear of conventional and pre-polymerized composite materials under erosive/abrasive conditions
- Author
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J. Zoller, Manuel, primary, Attin, Thomas, additional, and J. Wegehaupt, Florian, additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Adhesive application before hydrofluoric acid etching during repair procedure in dentistry?
- Author
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Julia J. Hartz, Florian J Wegehaupt, Tajana Zeig, Thomas Attin, University of Zurich, and Hartz, Julia J
- Subjects
Molar ,Materials science ,Polymers and Plastics ,Bond strength ,business.industry ,General Chemical Engineering ,2502 Biomaterials ,OptiBond FL ,Dentistry ,610 Medicine & health ,2507 Polymers and Plastics ,Biomaterials ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Hydrofluoric acid ,chemistry ,10066 Clinic of Conservative and Preventive Dentistry ,Dentin ,medicine ,Adhesive ,1500 General Chemical Engineering ,business - Abstract
Purpose To evaluate the influence of hydrofluoric acid (HF) contamination on the microtensile bond strength (μTBS) during dental repair procedures before and after application of different dentin adhesives (Optibond FL and Optibond XTR). Materials and methods Thirty-five human molars were ground down into the dentin and were randomly divided into seven groups (G1-G7; n = 5), G1 and G2 being the control groups. Only in the test groups (G3-G7) samples were subjected to HF (9,5%) contamination. Two adhesive systems, Optibond FL (G1, G3, G4, G6) and Optibond XTR (G2, G5, G7) were used. In G3-G5 the adhesive was applied before and after contamination, the test groups G6 and G7 were treated with a single adhesive application after contamination. After composite build-up, samples were stored in water (7 d) and μTBS was determined. Data were evaluated using Wilcoxon test (p Results Control group G2 showed significantly higher μTBS than G1. The HF-contamination did not result in a significant reduction of μTBS. The μTBS of the test groups treated with OptiBond XTR (G5, G7) were significantly higher than the test groups treated with OptiBond FL (G3, G4, G6) following the same procedure. Conclusions HF-contamination of dentin or the adhesive layer does not significantly impair the bond strength, if the adhesive is subsequently re-applied.
- Published
- 2021
50. Enamel Softening Can Be Reduced by Rinsing with a Fluoride Mouthwash Before Dental Erosion but Not with a Calcium Solution
- Author
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Philipp, Körner, Thanh Phong, Nguyen, Blend, Hamza, Thomas, Attin, and Florian J, Wegehaupt
- Subjects
Fluorides ,Mouthwashes ,Animals ,Humans ,Sodium Fluoride ,Calcium ,Cattle ,Tooth Erosion ,Dental Enamel - Abstract
This in-situ-study investigated if rinsing the oral cavity with a calcium containing solution or a fluoride containing mouthwash immediately before an erosive attack leads to reduced enamel softening.Bovine enamel samples (n = 240) with measured baseline surface microhardness (KHN) were assigned to five series (S1-5). Twelve participants carried out each series as follows: Four enamel samples of the associated test series were placed in an intraoral appliance and carried in each participants' mouth. After 30 min, the participants either rinsed the oral cavity for 60 s with 30 ml of a solution prepared from a 1,000 mg calcium effervescent tablet dissolved in 100 ml water (S2), an 800 mg calcium containing mineral supplement powder (5 g) dissolved in 200 ml water (S3), a fluoride (500 ppm) mouthwash (S4), a fluoride (500 ppm) and stannous chloride (800 ppm) containing mouthwash (S5), or did not rinse with any test solution before the erosive attack (S1, negative control). The participants subsequently rinsed the oral cavity with 100 ml of a soft drink (Sprite Zero) for 60 s to simulate the erosive attack and immediately afterwards with water to stop the erosive process. As final step, surface microhardness was measured a second time and hardness loss (∆KHN) calculated. Differences of ∆KHN between the series were investigated by fitting a mixed effect model to the data set.The highest loss of microhardness and thus softening of enamel (mean of ∆KHN; lower/upper confidence level) was observed in the negative control (S1: 60.2; 67.6/52.8). While no statistically significant difference (P0.05) compared to S1 could be found in S2 (50.0; 57.4/42.5) and S3 (54.6; 62.1/47.2), statistically significantly less softening of enamel (P0.001) was discovered in S5 (33.8; 41.2/26.4) and S4 (41.8.2; 49.3/34.4). S5 showed the overall lowest values for ∆KHN and thus best protection from enamel softening.Rinsing with a fluoride mouthwash or a fluoride and stannous chloride containing mouthwash immediately before an erosive attack reduces the softening of enamel. None of the investigated calcium-containing solutions was able to reduce erosion induced softening of enamel.
- Published
- 2021
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