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Morphology and bacterial colonisation of tooth/ceramic restoration interface after different cement excess removal techniques
Authors:Anami Lilian Costa  Pereira Cristiane Aparecida  Guerra Elen  Assunção e Souza Rodrigo Othávio de  Jorge Antônio Olavo Cardoso  Bottino Marco Antonio
Affiliation:1. Department of Dental Materials and Prosthodontics, São Paulo State University (UNESP/SJC), Brazil;2. Department of Oral Biopathology, São Paulo State University (UNESP/SJC), Brazil;3. Federal University of Paraíba (UFPB), Department of Restorative Dentistry, Division of Prosthodontics, João Pessoa, Brazil
Abstract:

Objectives

To evaluate the influence of different protocols for resin cement removal during cementation on biofilm formation.

Methods

Twenty-eight ceramic blocks, which were injected under pressure, were placed over enamel blocks obtained from freshly extracted bovine incisors. The ceramic blocks were cemented to the enamel blocks using a dual-cured resin cement and the excess resin was removed according to the experimental group: TS: Teflon spatula; BR: brush; BR+: brush and polishing; SB+: scalpel blade and polishing. After autoclaving, the samples were colonised by incubation in a sucrose broth suspension standardised with Streptococcus mutans in microaerophilic stove. Specimens were quantitatively analysed for bacterial adherence at the adhesive interface using confocal laser scanning microscopy and counting the colony forming units, and qualitatively analysed using SEM. The roughness (Ra/Rz/RSm) was also analysed. Data were analysed by 1-way ANOVA and Tukey's test (5%).

Results

The roughness values ranged from 0.96 to 1.69 μm for Ra (p > 0.05), from 11.59 to 22.80 μm for Rz (p = 0.02 < 0.05) and from 293.2 to 534.3 μm for RSm (p = 0.00). Bacterial adhesion varied between 1,974,000 and 2,814,000 CFU/ml (p = 0.00). Biofilm mean thickness ranged from 0.477 and 0.556 μm (p > 0.05), whilst the biovolume values were between 0.388 and 0.547 μm3/μm2 (p = 0.04). Lower values for roughness, bacterial adhesion, biofilm thickness and biovolume were found with BR, whilst TS presented the highest values for most of the parameters. SEM images confirmed the quantitative values.

Conclusions

The restoration margin morphology and interface roughness affects bacterial accumulation. The brush technique promoted less bacterial colonisation at the adhesive interface than did the other removal methods.

Clinical significance

The brush technique seems to be a good option for removing the excess resin cement after adhesive cementation in clinical practice, as indicated by its better results with lower bacterial colonisation.
Keywords:Bacterial colonisation   Removal techniques   Restoration margin   Roughness   Tooth   Ceramic
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