Electrochemical decontamination of titanium dental implants. An in vitro biofilm model study
Author | Virto, Leire |
Author | Odeh, Verónica |
Author | Garcia-Quismondo, Enrique |
Author | Herrera, David |
Author | Palma, Jesús |
Author | Tamimi, Faleh |
Author | Sanz, Mariano |
Available date | 2023-05-02T10:19:18Z |
Publication Date | 2023-02-27 |
Publication Name | Clinical Oral Implants Research |
Identifier | http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/clr.14055 |
Citation | Virto, L., Odeh, V., Garcia‐Quismondo, E., Herrera, D., Palma, J., Tamimi, F., & Sanz, M. (2023). Electrochemical decontamination of titanium dental implants. An in vitro biofilm model study. Clinical Oral Implants Research. |
ISSN | 0905-7161 |
Abstract | Objectives: The objective of this study is to study the effect of electrochemical treatment on biofilms developed on titanium dental implants, using a six-species in vitro model simulating subgingival oral biofilms. Materials and Methods: Direct electrical current (DC) of 0.75 V, 1.5 V, and 3 V (anodic polarization, oxidation processes) and of −0.75 V, −1.5 V, and -3 V (cathodic polarization, reduction processes) was applied between the working and the reference electrodes for 5 min on titanium dental implants, which have been previously inoculated with a multispecies biofilm. This electrical application consisted of a three-electrode system where the implant was the working electrode, a platinum mesh was the counter electrode, and an Ag/AgCl electrode was the reference. The effect of the electrical application on the biofilm structure and bacterial composition was evaluated by scanning electron microscopy and quantitative polymerase chain reaction. A generalized linear model was applied to study the bactericidal effect of the proposed treatment. Results: The electrochemical construct at 3 V and −3 V settings significantly reduced total bacterial counts (p <.05) from 3.15 × 106 to 1.85 × 105 and 2.92 × 104 live bacteria/mL, respectively. Fusobacterium nucleatum was the most affected species in terms of reduction in concentration. The 0.75 V and −0.75 V treatments had no effect on the biofilm. Conclusion: Electrochemical treatments had a bactericidal effect on this multispecies subgingival in vitro biofilm model, being the reduction more effective than the oxidative treatment. |
Sponsor | ITI (International Team for Implantology) Grant No. 1320_2018. |
Language | en |
Publisher | Wiley-Blackwell |
Subject | biofilm dental implant direct current electrochemical oxidation and reduction peri-implantitis |
Type | Article |
ESSN | 1600-0501 |
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Dental Medicine Research [338 items ]