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In situ remineralisation response of different artificial caries-like enamel lesions to home-care and professional fluoride treatments.

Authors :
Salomão PM
Comar LP
Buzalaf MA
Magalhães AC
Source :
BMC oral health [BMC Oral Health] 2016 Jan 08; Vol. 16, pp. 2. Date of Electronic Publication: 2016 Jan 08.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Background: Artificial lesions produced by different protocols might directly influence the response to different remineralising treatments. This study compared the response of different artificial caries-like enamel lesions to home-care and professional fluoride based-remineralising treatments in situ.<br />Methods: The tested demineralising protocols were methylcellulose- MC gel, polyacrylic acid - PA gel, tetraethyl methylene diphosphanate - TEMDP solution, and acetate- Buffer solution. The lesions were remineralised using an in situ model, following a crossover and double blind design. Twelve subjects wore intra-oral appliances during 3 phases (3 d each): control (C) (saliva); home-care F(-) treatment (FD) (1,100 ppm F(-) dentifrice, 2x1 min/day); and professional (FVD) (22,600 ppm F(-) varnish) plus FD. The de-remineralisation was measured by transverse microradiography-TMR and hardness (surface hardness/cross-sectional hardness, SH/CSH, respectively).<br />Results: For SH, lesions produced by PA gel were the only one showing significant differences among the remineralising treatments (C x FD x FVD); while the TEMDP lesion were not responsive to any fluoride treatment (for both SH/CSH). For TMR, there were no differences among the remineralising treatments, regardless of the type of lesion. Generally, the most responsive lesions to fluoride were the less demineralised lesions (considering hardness: PA gel and Buffer).<br />Conclusions: The type of lesion has influence on the surface remineralisation degree induced by home-care and professional fluoride treatments using this in situ model.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1472-6831
Volume :
16
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
BMC oral health
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
26746199
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12903-016-0160-9