Relevance of surface characteristics in the adhesiveness of polymicrobial biofilms to crown restoration materials.

Relevance of surface characteristics in the adhesiveness of polymicrobial biofilms to crown restoration materials. J Oral Sci. 2017 Nov 22;: Authors: Teranaka A, Tomiyama K, Ohashi K, Miyake K, Shimizu T, Hamada N, Mukai Y, Hirayama S, Nihei T Abstract We used a polymicrobial (PM) biofilm model to examine associations of bacterial adhesiveness with surface characteristics of various dental materials. Four types of dental materials (apatite pellet, zirconia, ceramic, and composite resin) with rough and mirror surfaces were used. Surface roughness, surface free energy, zeta potential, and colony-forming units (CFUs) of the biofilm formations were measured. Biofilms were cultured for 24 h under anaerobic conditions, plated onto blood agar medium, and anaerobically cultured for 4 days. After culturing, CFU per mm(2) was calculated, and samples were observed under a scanning electron microscope. Means and standard deviations of the experimental data were estimated, and one-way ANOVA and Tukey multiple comparison assays were performed. Pearson correlation coefficients were obtained for the CFU and surface characteristics. Surface roughness and surface free energy appeared to affect generation of PM biofilms on oral materials, and zeta potential was involved in generation of PM biofilms on mirror-ground oral materials. PMID: 29162785 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Journal of oral science - Category: Dentistry Tags: J Oral Sci Source Type: research
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