| Literature DB >> 33893556 |
Wang Lai Hui1,2, Vittoria Perrotti3, Adriano Piattelli4, Kostya Ken Ostrikov5, Zhi Fang6, Alessandro Quaranta1,2,7.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Treatment of implants with peri-implantitis is often unsuccessful due to residual microbial biofilm hindering re-osseointegration. The aim of this study was to treat biofilm-grown titanium (Ti) implants with different modalities involving air abrasion (AA) and cold atmospheric plasma (CAP) to compare the effectiveness in surface decontamination and the alteration/preservation of surface topography.Entities:
Keywords: Air abrasion; Biofilm; Decontamination; Dental implants; Plasma
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33893556 PMCID: PMC8602208 DOI: 10.1007/s00784-021-03949-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Oral Investig ISSN: 1432-6981 Impact factor: 3.573
Fig. 1Schematic drawing of the study design
Fig. 2a Parafilm wax coating of implant’s apical 4mm. b Peri-implantitis model of Sawbone defect
Fig. 3a Schematic drawing of air abrasion treatment. b Setup of PI model and air abrasion treatment
Fig. 4a Schematic drawing of CAP treatment. b Setup of CAP treatment (NB: implant not representative). c Setup of CAP treatment
The amount of residual biofilm following decontamination treatments, measured through crystal violet staining and expressed by means ± standard deviation values of the optical density measurements.
| -ve control | +ve control | AA | CAP | COM |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.0215 | 0.136 ± 0.002 | 0.030 ± 0.003 | 0.078 ± 0.007 | 0.029 ± 0.004 |
Data are presented as mean ± standard deviation (SD)
-ve control, non contaminated and treated by air abrasion and cold atmospheric plasma; +ve control, contaminated and untreated; AA, air abrasive; CAP, cold atmospheric plasma; COM, air abrasive + cold atmospheric plasma
Results of Tukey’s multiple comparison test for biofilm quantification
| Mean rank diff. | ||
|---|---|---|
| -ve control vs. +ve control | −0.1145 | **** <0.001 |
| -ve control vs. AA | −0.008500 | 0.1951 |
| -ve control vs. CAP | −0.05650 | **** <0.001 |
| -ve control vs. COM | −0.007500 | 0.3013 |
| +ve control vs. AA | 0.1060 | **** <0.001 |
| +ve control vs. CAP | 0.05800 | **** <0.001 |
| +ve control vs. COM | 0.1070 | **** <0.001 |
| AA vs. CAP | −0.04800 | **** <0.001 |
| AA vs. COM | 0.001000 | 0.9930 |
| CAP vs. COM | 0.04900 | **** <0.001 |
-ve control, non contaminated and treated by air abrasion and cold atmospheric plasma; +ve control, contaminated and untreated; AA, air abrasive; CAP, cold atmospheric plasma; COM, air abrasive + cold atmospheric plasma
p values were based on Tukey’s multiple comparison test
Fig. 5Percentage of biofilm removal after the decontamination of Ti implants with a moderately rough surface by means of air-abrasive unit (AA) delivering erythritol, cold atmospheric plasma (CAP), and combined AA and CAP (COM) treatments
Fig. 6Scanning electron microscope (SEM) images of the titanium implants after the decontamination with air-abrasive unit (AA), cold atmospheric plasma (CAP), combined AA and CAP (COM) treatments; negative (-ve) control, non-contaminated and treated by AA and CAP; positive (+ve) control group, contaminated and untreated discs. Scale bars are 100 (a–e) and 10 (f–l) micrometers, magnification: ×270 (a–e) and ×2700 (f–l).