Effects of hexafluorosilicate on the precipitate composition and dentine tubule occlusion by calcium phosphate

1996 
Abstract Objectives : To improve the calcium phosphate precipitation (CPP) method for the occlusion of dentine tubules with calcium phosphate, the addition of calcium hexafluorosilicate (CaSiF 6 ) to CPP solution was evaluated in vitro with respect to its occluding capacity and the composition of the precipitate. Methods : The occlusion of dentine tubules was evaluated by SEM observations and by measurements of dentine permeability. The composition of the precipitate was determined by measuring the calcium to phosphorus ( Ca P ) ratio of the precipitate in dentine tubules by energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDS). Results : The addition of CaSiF 6 to the CPP solution resulted in an increase of the Ca P ratio in the precipitate not only on the dentine surface but also inside the dentine tubules; indicating that the precipitate became more apatitic in nature. The addition of CaSiF 6 had no effect on occluding capacity in terms of measurements of dentine permeability or SEM observations. Dentine permeability decreased to approximately 4% of pretreatment values and the dentine tubules were occluded for approximately 10–15 μm from the dentine surface. Conclusion : It is concluded that the addition of CaSiF 6 to CPP solution was desirable, since it provided a more apatitic precipitate in the dentine tubules, not only on the dentine surface but also inside the tubules, and there were no drawbacks with respect to its occluding capacity.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    26
    References
    7
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []