| Literature DB >> 32545226 |
Laisa Cruzetta1, Isadora M Garcia1, Gabriela de Souza Balbinot1, Amanda S Motta2, Fabrício M Collares1, Salvatore Sauro3, Vicente C B Leitune1.
Abstract
The aim of the present study was to formulate dental adhesives with different concentrations of LiNbO3 and to evaluate their physicochemical and antibacterial properties. A dental adhesive was formulated using methacrylate monomers and photoinitiators and used as a control filler-free group. Subsequently, three experimental adhesives doped with LiNbO3 at different concentrations (1 wt.%, 2 wt.%, and 5 wt.%) were also formulated. All the experimental adhesives were assessed to evaluate the degree of conversion (DC), softening in solvent, immediate and long-term microtensile bond-strength (μ-TBS), radiopacity, ultimate tensile strength, and antibacterial activity. The incorporation of 1 wt.% of LiNbO3 had no negative effect on the DC of the adhesive resin compared to the control group (p > 0.05). We observed a decrease in the percentage of softening in solvent in the group LiNbO3 at 1 wt.% (p < 0.05). The addition of LiNbO3 increased the radiopacity at a concentration above 2 wt.%, and there was also an increase in cohesive strength (p < 0.05). The immediate μ-TBS increased for LiNbO3 at 5 wt.% (p < 0.05), and there was no statistical difference for the other groups compared to the control (p > 0.05). After six months, the group with 5 wt.% still presented the highest μ-TBS (p < 0.05). The adhesives showed no antimicrobial activity (p > 0.05). LiNbO3 was successfully incorporated in dental adhesives, increasing the radiopacity and their resistance to degradation. Although LiNbO3 offered no antibacterial properties, the reliability of LiNbO3 incorporation in the adhesive encourages new tests to better investigate the antimicrobial action of LiNbO3 through temperature variation.Entities:
Keywords: antibacterial agents; dental materials; light-curing of dental adhesives; lithium niobate; methacrylate-based materials
Year: 2020 PMID: 32545226 PMCID: PMC7362253 DOI: 10.3390/polym12061330
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Polymers (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4360 Impact factor: 4.329
Figure 1Schematic representation showing the pyroelectric–catalytic effect that occurs at a temperature variation between 25–45 °C, which induces the antimicrobial effect in LiNbO3.
Figure 2Illustrative image of the adhesives formulated, and methods applied to test the materials: degree of conversion, softening in solvent, radiopacity, ultimate tensile strength, immediate and longitudinal microtensile bond strength, and antibacterial activity.
Results of the degree of conversion (DC), radiopacity, and ultimate tensile strength (UTS) of the experimental adhesives expressed in the mean and standard deviation for each group.
| Groups | DC (%) | Radiopacity (Pixel Density) | UTS (MPa) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0% LiNbO3 | 62.61 (±0.40) A | 29.45 (±2.56) B | 52.81 (±10.11) B |
| 1% LiNbO3 | 61.22 (±2.61) AB | 31.37 (±2.70) B | 58.90 (±4.14) AB |
| 2% LiNbO3 | 57.99 (±0.45) B | 32.27 (±4.92) B | 62.04 (±6.90) A |
| 5% LiNbO3 | 53.55 (±3.83) C | 38.40 (±3.68) A | 57.89 (±4.44) AB |
Values followed by different capital letters in the same column indicate statistical difference (p < 0.05). Values followed by different lowercase letters on the same line indicate statistical difference (p < 0.05).
Figure 3X-ray image obtained in the digital system. One sample per group was exposed to an aluminum step-wedge to compare the radiopacity achieved for each experimental adhesive.
The results of the immediate and longitudinal microtensile bond strength (μ-TBS) of the experimental adhesives expressed in the mean and standard deviation for each group.
| Groups | Immediate µ-TBS 24 (MPa) | Longitudinal µ-TBS (MPa) |
|---|---|---|
| 0% LiNbO3 | 31.85 (±13.55) Ba | 30.80 (±11.45) Ba |
| 1% LiNbO3 | 38.42 (±9.22) ABa | 24.38 (±11.49) Bb |
| 2% LiNbO3 | 38.80 (±12.91) ABa | 28.11 (±9.48) Bb |
| 5% LiNbO3 | 45.03 (±8.58) Aa | 38.95 (±13.63) Aa |
Values followed by different capital letters in the same column indicate statistical difference (p < 0.05). Values followed by different lowercase letters on the same line indicate statistical difference (p < 0.05).
The results of the initial Knoop hardness (KHN1), final Knoop hardness (KHN2), and softening in solvent (ΔKHN%) of the experimental adhesives expressed in the mean and standard deviation for each group.
| Groups | KHN1 | KHN2 | ΔKHN% |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0% LiNbO3 | 19.64 (±1.05) Aa | 11.68 (±1.82) b | 40.52 (±8.84) A |
| 1% LiNbO3 | 18.73 (±1.24) Aa | 13.68 (±0.84) b | 25.59 (±8.14) B |
| 2% LiNbO3 | 19.19 (±0.63) Aa | 10.34 (±1.35) b | 45.86 (±8.22) A |
| 5% LiNbO3 | 17.48 (±1.94) Aa | 8.4 (±2.36) b | 51.79 (±10.41) A |
Values followed by different capital letters in the same column indicate statistical difference (p < 0.05). Values followed by different lowercase letters on the same row indicate statistical difference (p < 0.05).
Antibacterial activity through biofilm and planktonic analyses of the formulated adhesives.
| Groups | Biofilm | Planktonic |
|---|---|---|
| Log UFC/mL | Log UFC/mL | |
| 0% LiNbO3 | 4.74 (±0.78) A | 7.94 (±0.04) A |
| LiNb1% | 5.14 (±0.17) A | 8.18 (±0.04) A |
| LiNb2% | 5.54 (±0.43) A | 8.06 (±0.19) A |
| LiNb5% | 4.27 (±0.51) A | 8.18 (±0.02) A |
| Negative Control | - | 8.00 (±0.03) A |
Same capital letters in the same column indicate no statistically significant difference (p > 0.05).