Silver diamine fluoride differentially affects dentin and hypomineralized enamel permeabilities
Journal Article
·
· Dental Materials
OBJECTIVES: To investigate the physicochemical effect of silver diamine fluoride (SDF) by correlating permeability with mineral density and elemental composition of hypomineralized enamel and carious dentin. METHODS: Enamel and dentin from human carious primary teeth with and without SDF treatment in-vivo, and hypomineralized enamel from permanent molars with and without SDF treatment in-vitro were scanned using micro X-ray computed tomography. Spatial maps of biometals (calcium, zinc), phosphorus, and silver were generated using X-ray fluorescence microprobe. Permeabilities were computed using Porous Microstructure Analysis software. RESULTS: The intrinsic permeability of SDF-treated carious dentin was 14.3 % lower than untreated sound dentin (6.39e-15 ± 3.01e-15 m² vs 7.46e-15 ± 1.82e-15 m²; P < 0.0001), while untreated carious dentin was 98.4 % higher (1.48e-14 ± 7.11e-15 m²; P < 0.0001). SDF-treated and untreated transparent dentin showed similar reduced permeabilities (75.6 % and 78.4 % lower than untreated sound dentin, respectively; P = 0.93). Severely hypomineralized enamel showed permeability reaching 108.1 % of adjacent sound dentin (5.71e-15 ± 2.04e-15 m² vs 5.28e-15 ± 1.30e-15 m²; P = 0.1409) and was significantly higher than mildly hypomineralized enamel (1.39e-15 ± 1.04e-15 m²; P < 0.0001). SDF treatment did not significantly impact the permeability of severely hypomineralized enamel (12.4 % reduction; P = 0.07). Principal component regression identified Zn level as a significant effector of tissue permeabilities in carious primary teeth (P < 0.0001). SIGNIFICANCE: This study introduces a computational method to measure dental tissue permeability, and demonstrates that SDF significantly reduces permeability in carious dentin but not intact hypomineralized enamel. The study reveals biometal Zn localization can alter dentin and enamel permeabilities, providing new insights into pathobiological mechanisms underlying caries and hypomineralization.
- Research Organization:
- Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL), Berkeley, CA (United States)
- Sponsoring Organization:
- US Department of Energy; USDOE Office of Science (SC), Basic Energy Sciences (BES) (SC-22), Scientific User Facilities Division (SC-22.3 )
- Grant/Contract Number:
- AC02-05CH11231
- OSTI ID:
- 2587603
- Journal Information:
- Dental Materials, Journal Name: Dental Materials Journal Issue: 9 Vol. 41
- Country of Publication:
- United States
- Language:
- English