| Literature DB >> 32290613 |
Juliana Caletti Monteiro1, Michele Stürmer1, Isadora Martini Garcia1, Mary Anne Melo2,3, Salvatore Sauro4,5, Vicente Castelo Branco Leitune1, Fabrício Mezzomo Collares1.
Abstract
: Quaternary ammonium compounds and calcium phosphates have been incorporated into dental materials to enhance their biointeractivity and preventive effects. This study aimed at evaluating the physical and chemical properties and effects against Streptococcus mutans of a dental sealant containing 1,3,5-tri acryloyl hexahydro-1,3,5-triazine (TAT) and α-tricalcium phosphate (α-TCP). A methacrylate-based dental sealant was initially formulated. α-TCP and TAT (Gα-TCPTAT) were added to the experimental sealant at 2 wt.% each. One group was formulated without α-TCP and TAT and used as control (GCTRL). All tested resins were analyzed for polymerization kinetics and degree of conversion (DC %), Knoop hardness (KHN), softening in solvent (∆KHN%), ultimate tensile strength (UTS), the contact angle with water or with α-bromonaphthalene, surface free energy (SFE) and antibacterial activity against Streptococcus mutans in biofilm and in planktonic cells. The polymerization kinetic was different between groups, but without statistical differences in the DC % (p<0.05). KHN and ΔKHN% did not change between groups (p>0.05), but Gα-TCPTAT presented greater UTS compared to GCTRL (p<0.05). No differences were found for contact angle (p>0.05) or SFE (p>0.05). Gα-TCPTAT showed greater antibacterial activity in comparison to GCTRL (p<0.05). The formulation of dental sealants containing TAT and α-TCP can be characterized by improved mechanical and antibacterial properties.Entities:
Keywords: antibacterial; dental resin; polymerization; remineralizing; triazines
Year: 2020 PMID: 32290613 PMCID: PMC7240744 DOI: 10.3390/polym12040895
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Polymers (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4360 Impact factor: 4.329
Figure 1Schematic draw of the study design.
Mean and standard deviation values of degree of conversion (DC %), microhardness before (KHN1) and after (KHN2) the immersion in the solvent, the variation of microhardness (ΔΚHΝ%) and ultimate tensile strength (UTS).
| Group | DC % | KHN1 | KHN2 | ΔKHN% | UTS (MPa) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GCTRL | 51.08 (±3.17) A | 16.41 (±0.97) Aa | 6.10 (±0.53) b | 62.64 (±4.98) A | 46.71 (±3.52) B |
| Gα-TCPTAT | 49.67 (±4.47) A | 18.41 (±2.22) Aa | 6.40 (±0.83) b | 65.02 (±4.83) A | 55.61 (±3.33) A |
Different capital letters indicate a statistical difference in the same column (p < 0.05). Different lowercase letters indicate a statistical difference in the same line for KHN1 and KHN2 of the same material (p < 0.05).
Figure 2Polymerization behavior evaluation for 30 s of the experimental resin sealants. (A) DC % versus photoactivation time. (B) Rp versus photoactivation time.
Mean and standard deviation values of contact angle with distilled water and α-bromonaphthalene and surface free energy (SFE) of experimental sealant resins.
| Group | Contact Angle | Contact Angle | SFE (mN/M) |
|---|---|---|---|
| GCTRL | 67.71 (±3.32) A | 24.69 (±3.09) A | 48.68 (±1.40) A |
| Gα-TCPTAT | 66.49 (±10.9) A | 26.96 (±3.77) A | 49.08 (±6.05) A |
Same capital letters indicate no statistical difference in the same column (p > 0.05).
Mean and standard deviation values of log-transformed colony-forming units/ mL (CFU/mL) for bacteria in biofilm or planktonic bacteria after the contact during 24 h with the experimental dental sealants.
| Group | Effect against S. Mutans | |
|---|---|---|
| Biofilm | Planktonic Bacteria | |
| GCTRL | 06.38 (±0.57) A | 09.21 (±0.14) A |
| Gα-TCPTAT | 04.95 (±0.30) B | 07.73 (±0.56) B |
| Negative control | - | 09.14 (±0.10) A |
Different capital letters indicate a statistical difference between groups in the same column (p < 0.05).
Figure 3Schematic draw of the dental sealant formulated and analyzed in the present research, containing an antibacterial and a bioactive agent.