| Literature DB >> 35039599 |
Blend Hamza1, Maria Niedzwiecki2, Philipp Körner2, Thomas Attin2, Florian J Wegehaupt2.
Abstract
The geometrical properties of toothbrushes play a role in developing abrasive tooth wear and non-carious cervical lesions. This study investigated the interplay between the toothbrush tuft arrangement (crossed vs. parallel) and bristle stiffness (soft vs. medium) on the abrasive dentin wear using three slurries with different levels of abrasivity (RDA: 67, 121 and 174). Twelve groups of bovine dentin samples (n = 20) were brushed with a combination of the aforementioned variables. Abrasive dentin wear was recorded with a profilometer and the resulting abrasive wear of each group was calculated and compared with each other using two-way ANOVA and pairwise tests. Toothbrushes with parallel tuft arrangement caused statistically significantly higher dentin wear compared to crossed tuft arrangement, regardless of the abrasivity level of the used slurry and the bristle stiffness. Soft crossed tuft toothbrushes caused statistically significantly higher abrasive dentin wear than medium crossed tuft toothbrushes, while soft and medium parallel tuft toothbrushes caused the same amounts of dentin wear, regardless of the RDA value of the used slurry. These results could be helpful for dentists and dental hygienists when advising patients. Crossed tuft toothbrushes could be a less-abrasive choice in comparison to parallel tuft toothbrushes.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35039599 PMCID: PMC8764029 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-04884-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Properties of the tested toothbrushes.
| Toothbrush type | Soft crossed (M39) and parallel (M43) tuft design | Medium crossed (M39) and parallel (M43) tuft design |
|---|---|---|
| Bristle diameter | 0.2 mm | 0.2 mm |
| Bristle length | 12 mm | 10.5 mm |
| Material | Polyamide | Polyamide |
| Tip configuration | End-rounded | End-rounded |
| Number of tufts | 32 | 32 |
| Number of bristles per tuft | 40 ± 4 | 40 ± 4 |
Figure 1Top view pictures of the crossed tuft (left) and parallel tuft (right) toothbrushes (both medium bristle stiffness. The soft bristle toothbrushes had the same geometric profile).
Study design.
Figure 2Abrasive dentin wear (median + interquartile range, IQR = whiskers) in the experimental groups [crossed tuft design (X), parallel tuft design (II)]. Same letters indicate no statistically significant difference within the respective abrasive slurry (same RDA value).