AI Article Synopsis

  • This study evaluated the effectiveness of a combination of 2.5% sodium hypochlorite (NaOCl) and 9% etidronic acid (HEBP) against Enterococcus faecalis in biofilms and infected dentinal tubules.
  • Both NaOCl and the combination killed 100% of E. faecalis biofilms, while HEBP alone had limited effect on biofilms but was still effective in dentinal tubules.
  • The addition of HEBP did not reduce the antimicrobial properties of NaOCl, suggesting that it can be used together without compromising effectiveness.

Article Abstract

Introduction: The aim of this study was to evaluate the antimicrobial activity of a 2.5% sodium hypochlorite (NaOCl)/9% etidronic acid (HEBP) irrigant solution on Enterococcus faecalis growing in biofilms and a dentinal tubule infection model.

Methods: The antimicrobial activity of the solutions 2.5% NaOCl and 9% HEBP alone and associated was evaluated on E. faecalis biofilms grown in the Calgary biofilm model (minimum biofilm eradication concentration high-throughput device). For the dentinal tubule infection test, the percentage of dead cells in E. faecalis-infected dentinal tubules treated with the solutions for 10 minutes was measured using confocal laser scanning microscopy and the live/dead technique. Available chlorine and pH of the solutions were also measured. Distilled water was used as the control. Nonparametric tests were used to determine statistical differences.

Results: The highest viability was found in the distilled water group and the lowest in the NaOCl-treated dentin (P < .05). Both NaOCl solutions killed 100% of the E. faecalis biofilms and showed the highest antimicrobial activity inside dentinal tubules, without statistical differences between the 2 (P < .05). The HEBP isolated solution killed bacteria inside dentinal tubules but did not present any significant effect against E. faecalis biofilms. The incorporation of HEBP to NaOCl did not cause any loss of available chlorine within 60 minutes.

Conclusions: HEBP did not interfere with the ability of NaOCl to kill E. faecalis grown in biofilms and inside dentinal tubules.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.joen.2014.07.031DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

antimicrobial activity
16
dentinal tubules
16
faecalis biofilms
12
inside dentinal
12
irrigant solution
8
dentinal tubule
8
tubule infection
8
distilled water
8
dentinal
6
hebp
5

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!