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  • Title: Long-term anti-cariogenic biofilm activity of glass ionomers related to fluoride release.
    Author: Chau NP, Pandit S, Jung JE, Cai JN, Yi HK, Jeon JG.
    Journal: J Dent; 2016 Apr; 47():34-40. PubMed ID: 26875614.
    Abstract:
    OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study was to evaluate the difference between anti-cariogenic biofilm activities of glass ionomers (G-Is) during the initial and second fluoride release phases and to define relationships between the anti-biofilm activities and fluoride release. METHODS: Fluoride release of three commercially available G-Is in a buffer was evaluated for 770 h, and then 70-h-old Streptococcus mutans UA159 biofilms were formed on the G-Is that had been immersed in the buffer for 0, 100, 200, or 700 h. The dry weight, bacterial cell number, water-insoluble extracellular polysaccharides (EPSs), and accumulated fluoride concentration of the 70-h-old biofilms and fluoride release and acid production rates during biofilm formation were determined. Relationships between the experimental variables and fluoride release rate were also evaluated using linear regression analysis. RESULTS: In this study, fluoride release of the tested G-Is did not exhibit a biphasic pattern during biofilm formation. The release was sustained or did not rapidly decrease even over long immersion periods and was strongly correlated with an increase in accumulated fluoride concentration of the biofilms (R=0.99, R(2)=0.98) and reductions in dry weight, water-insoluble EPSs, and acid production rate of the biofilms (R=-0.99 to -0.96, R(2)=0.92-0.98). CONCLUSIONS: This study suggests that G-Is can effectively affect acid production, EPS formation, and accumulation of cariogenic biofilms even during the second fluoride release phase, and that the anti-cariogenic biofilm activity is strongly correlated with fluoride release, which may be enhanced by acid production of cariogenic biofilms. CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE: G-Is can affect cariogenic biofilm formation even during the second fluoride release phase.
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