| Literature DB >> 30623630 |
Manuja Sharma1, Jasmine Y Graham2, Philip A Walczak3, Ryan Nguyen4, Lauren K Lee5, Matthew D Carson6,7, Leonard Y Nelson6,7, Shwetak N Patel1, Zheng Xu3, Eric J Seibel1,6,7.
Abstract
Sugar-rich diets and poor dental hygiene promote the formation of a biofilm (plaque) that strongly adheres to the dental enamel surface and fosters the evolution of aciduric bacteria. The acid contributes to demineralization of the exterior tooth enamel, which accelerates after the pH drops below a critical value (∼5.5) for extended time periods resulting in the need for restorative procedures. Preventative techniques to alert the dentist and caries-susceptible patients regarding vulnerability to dental decay require a clinical measure of plaque activity. Therefore, there is a need to evaluate the acid production capability of plaque deposits in the pits and fissures of occlusal and interproximal regions. A ratiometric fluorescence pH-sensing device has been developed using an FDA-approved dye and LED excitation. Fluorescein spectral profiles were collected using a spectrometer and analyzed with a spectral unmixing algorithm for calibration over the pH range of 4.5 to 7. An in vivo pilot study on human subjects was performed using a sucrose rinse to accelerate bacterial metabolism and to measure the time-dependent drop in pH. The optical system is relatively immune to confounding factors such as photobleaching, dye concentration, and variation in excitation intensity associated with earlier dye-based pH measurement techniques.Entities:
Keywords: anion; caries; dianion; fluorescein; fluorescence; pH; plaque; unmixing
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30623630 PMCID: PMC6985695 DOI: 10.1117/1.JBO.24.1.017001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Opt ISSN: 1083-3668 Impact factor: 3.170
Fig. 1(a) Diagram of electro-optical device and (b) dental probe.
Fig. 2(a) FL emission spectrum (450 to 650 nm) for different pH solutions. (b) Tooth AF using 420-nm LED and FL spectrum with noisy AF (c) AF removal. All signals have been normalized using the peak intensity recorded.
Fig. 3Procedure for plaque pH measurement.
Fig. 4Calibration curves obtained using buffered FL solution in 1-mm glass cuvette. (a) Anion calibration curve and (b) dianion calibration curve.
Fig. 5Bland–Altman plot (with 95% agreement) between reference pH meter and predicted pH values using FL for (a) anion and (b) dianion.
Fig. 6(a) In vitro measurements: reference measurements using the conventional pH meter in green square, repeatable measurements using the FL system in blue circles, and error bars between average of the three repeated measurements and reference system in red. (b) Bland–Altman plot between reference pH meter and predicted pH values for in-vitro tooth samples (using 95% agreement between variables).
Fig. 7(a) In vivo measurement and (b) mean resting pH and sucrose response of two subjects after 0.3-M sucrose rinse. pH value before 0 min indicates mean resting pH of subject’s tooth. Tooth number is listed in the legend along with the surface (OC: occlusal). The time from 1 to 16 min is the dynamic sucrose response obtained by taking measurements every 5 min.