The photo-activated and photo-thermal effect of the 445/970 nm diode laser on the mixed biofilm inside root canals of human teeth in vitro: A pilot study.

Photodiagnosis Photodyn Ther

Department of Endodontics and Restorative Dentistry, School of Dental Medicine, University of Zagreb, Gundulićeva 5, 10000, Zagreb, Croatia. Electronic address:

Published: June 2019

Aims: 1) Evaluation of the photo-thermal (PT) and photo-activated (PAD) antibacterial effect of the 445/970 nm diode laser on E. faecalis, S. aureus and C. albicans mixed biofilms grown together inside root canals of human teeth. 2) Defining a potentially efficient clinical protocol for safe and predictable usage in endodontic procedures.

Methodology: The root canals of 100 extracted human teeth with single straight canals were prepared with ProTaper NEXT files, sterilized, contaminated with a combination of three cultures (E. faecalis, S. aureus, C. albicans) and incubated for 15 days. The samples were randomly distributed into three groups (n = 20) and treated as follows: Group 1 (G1) - the 445 nm photo-thermal (PT) effect, Group 2 (G2) - a combination of the 445 nm and 970 nm PT effect, Group 3 (G3) - the 445 nm photo-activated (PAD) effect with 0.1% riboflavin, Group 4 (G4) - a combination of 3% sodium hypochlorite (NaOCl) and the 445 nm PAD effect. Four samples were used as positive control (non-treated) and four as a negative control. 12 aditional samples were used as a control for the G4 (3% NaOCl rinse without the laser). The number of viable microbes in each canal was determined by the colony forming unit (CFU) count.

Results: A statistically significant reduction in the microbial population after all treatments was observed (P < 0.001). Groups 2 and 3 showed similar results, both better than Group 1. Group 4 produced the best results.

Conclusions: The 445 nm PAD protocol has a stronger antimicrobial effect than the 445 nm PT protocol. Prolonged exposure time to laser light and a combination of wavelengths (445/970 PT protocol) helps in the reduction of microbes. C. albicans appears to be more sensitive to laser irradiation than the other bacteria tested in this study. Following current results, tested laser protocols could be recommended for clinical usage but only as an adjunct to "classic" NaOCl rinse since alone they are not able to completely eradicate all microorganisms.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pdpdt.2019.04.014DOI Listing

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