Antimicrobial effect of endodontic solutions used as final irrigants on a dentine biofilm model

2012 
Ordinola-Zapata R, Bramante CM, Cavenago B, Graeff MSZ, Gomes de Moraes I, Marciano M, Duarte MAH. Antimicrobial effect of endodontic solutions used as final irrigants on a dentine biofilm model. International Endodontic Journal, 45, 162–168, 2012. Abstract Aim  To evaluate the residual biovolume of live bacterial cells, the mean biofilm thickness and the substratum coverage found in mixed biofilms treated with different endodontic irrigant solutions. Methodology  Twenty-five bovine dentine specimens were infected intraorally using a removable orthodontic device. Five samples were used for each irrigant solution: 2% chlorhexidine, 1% sodium hypochlorite (NaOCl), 10% citric acid, 17% EDTA and distilled water. The solutions were used for 5 min. The samples were stained using the Live/Dead technique and evaluated using a confocal microscope. Differences in the amount of total biovolume (μm3), number of surviving cells (μm3), mean biofilm thickness (μm) and substratum coverage (%) of the treated biofilms were determined using nonparametric statistical tests (P < 0.05). Results  Similar values of biovolume total, biovolume of live subpopulations and substratum coverage were found in 2% chlorhexidine, 10% citric acid, 17% EDTA and distilled water-treated biofilms (P > 0.05). The lower values of the studied parameters were found in 1% NaOCl-treated dentine (P   0.05). Conclusions  One per cent sodium hypochlorite was the only irrigant that had a significant effect on biofilm viability and architecture.
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