| Literature DB >> 36015644 |
Faris A Alshahrani1, Fatemah AlToraibily2, Maryam Alzaid2, Amr A Mahrous1, Maram A Al Ghamdi1, Mohammed M Gad1.
Abstract
Salivary pH is a neglected factor that may affect the performance of removable dental prostheses (RDP). This study aimed to review literature in reference to the role of salivary pH on the performance of RDP and materials used for their fabrication. From January 1990 until December 2021, a search was done on PubMed, Scopus, and Web of Science databases using removable dental prostheses, salivary pH, PMMA, Denture base, and physical properties as keywords. Articles that met the inclusion criteria (full-length articles have investigated the effect of salivary pH on RDP materials in vitro and in vivo) were included. Out of 433 articles, 8 articles that met the inclusion criteria were included. All studies used artificial saliva with different salivary pH ranging between 3 and 14. Two articles investigated the role of salivary pH on the cytotoxicity of denture base resins and soft liner. One article studied the durability and retention of attachments, one article analyzed the performance of PEEK materials, one article researched the fatigue resistance of a denture base, one article investigated the corrosion of RPD framework cast and milled Co-Cr, one article studied the strength and clasp retention and deformation of acetal and PEEK materials, and one evaluated changes in mass and surface morphology of CAD-CAM fiber-reinforced composites for the prosthetic framework. Different salivary pH affected all included materials in this review except PEEK materials. The most adverse effect was reported with alkaline and acidic; however, the acidic showed the most deterioration effect. Salivary pH has a role in the selection of material used for RDP fabrication.Entities:
Keywords: biological and physical properties; complete denture; polymethylmethacrylate; salivary pH
Year: 2022 PMID: 36015644 PMCID: PMC9416770 DOI: 10.3390/polym14163387
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Polymers (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4360 Impact factor: 4.967
Figure 1Flow chart of study selection.
Details of included studies.
| Author/Year/ | Restorations/Specimen Dimensions | Saliva/Type | Sample Size | Aging Effect | Tested | Results and | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| pH | Composition | ||||||
| Koda T et al., 1990 | Auto-polymerized | pH 4 | 0.3 mM CaS04; | ( | 10 days immersion | Leachability of MMA, methacrylic acid | The leachability of MMA, M, BA, and MA increased in more acidic and less acidic pH and this mainly due hydrolysis of MMA which resulted in more chemotoxic actions of denture base material |
| Akay C et al., 2017 | denture lining materials/ | pH 4 | 4.1 mM KH2PO4, | ( | 21 days immersion | Cytotoxicity | The cytotoxicity of soft liners increases with storage in different salivary pH. |
| Silva et al., 2015 | 4 types of attachments | pH 4 | KC1;18.5% 6.5 mL | ( | 5400 insertion/removal cycles were simulated (5 years) | durability and retention | Different salivary pH adversely affects the retention and the most negative effect on the attachment retention was recorded with more acidic pH. |
| Gao et al., 2015 | polyetheretherketone (PEEK) | pH 3 | NaCl 125.6 | ( | 30 days immersion | elastic moduli, nanohardness, viscoelasticity, | no significant changes in PEEK after immersion in different salivary pH |
| Sa et al., 2019 | prosthesis bases | pH 4 | 0.4 g/L NaCl, | ( | 30 days immersion | fatigue resistance | the fracture resistance of denture base resins was decreases with results at low pH environment |
| Bechir et al., 2021 | Co-Cr alloy, casted or milled/ | pH 3 | Na2HPO4 0.19 | NS | NS | corrosion behavior of two commercial Co-Cr dental alloys manufactured by casting and by milling | Co-Cr alloys (cast and milled) have poor corrosion resistance when immersed in artificial saliva with acidic salivary pH. However, the corrosion behavior of milled one was better, making this alloy a better option for GERD patients |
| Fathy et al., 2021 | denture base and clasp construction/ | pH 5.8 pH 7.2 pH 8.3 | NaCl 0.70, | ( | NS | flexural strength, hardness, | At acidic and alkaline pH and combining thermal aging, the flexural strength and surface microhardness of acetal, as well as its clasp retention and deformation, Meanwhile, PEEK clasps were not significantly affected. |
| Bechir et al., 2021 | restorative materials for prosthetic oral rehabilitation | pH 3 | Na2HPO4 0.19 g | NS | 21 days | changes in mass or surface morphology | Novel composite biomaterials showed a stable surface when in contact with different salivary pH and can be used to fabricate prosthetic frameworks in GERD patients |
Risk of bias analysis of included studies.
| Questions—JBI Critical Appraisal Checklist | Revisor 1 | Revisor 1 | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yes | No | Unclear | NA | Yes | No | Unclear | NA | ||
| 1 | Is it clear in the study what is the ‘cause’ and what is the ‘effect’ (there is no confusion about which variable comes first)? | 8 | 8 | ||||||
| 2 | Were the participants included in any comparisons similar? | 8 | 8 | ||||||
| 3 | Were the participants included in any comparisons receiving similar treatment/care, other than the exposure or intervention of interest? | 5 | 3 | 8 | |||||
| 4 | Was there a control group? | 8 | 8 | ||||||
| 5 | Were there multiple measurements of the outcome both pre and post the intervention/exposure? | 6 | 2 | 8 | |||||
| 6 | Was follow up complete and if not, were differences between groups in terms of their follow up adequately described and analyzed? | 8 | 8 | ||||||
| 7 | Were the outcomes of participants included in any comparisons measured in the same way? | 8 | 7 | 1 | |||||
| 8 | Were outcomes measured in a reliable way? | 6 | 2 | 8 | |||||
| 9 | Was appropriate statistical analysis used? | 8 | 8 | ||||||