Influence of microleakage, surface roughness and biofilm control on secondary caries formation around composite resin restorations: an in situ evaluation

Authors

  • Fábio Garcia Lima University of Western Santa Catarina; Department of Operative Dentistry
  • Ana Regina Romano Federal University of Pelotas; Dental School; Department of Cariology, Pediatric and Preventive Dentistry
  • Marcos Britto Correa Federal University of Pelotas; Dental School; Department of Operative Dentistry
  • Flávio Fernando Demarco Federal University of Pelotas; Dental School; Department of Operative Dentistry

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1590/S1678-77572009000100012

Keywords:

Biofilm, Dental caries, Dental leakage, Dental plaque

Abstract

This study was carried out to evaluate in situ the influence of microleakage, surface roughness and biofilm control on caries formation around composite resin restorations. During 28 days, 12 volunteers wore palatal devices containing bovine enamel slabs restored with composite resin. Restorations were made without leakage, when the adhesive system was applied, or with leakage, when adhesive system was omitted. Half of the restorations in each group were finished and the remaining were finished and polished. In one side of the palatal device, biofilm was left to accumulate over the restored slabs, and in the other side dental slabs were brushed, to allow biofilm removal. There was an extraoral application of 20% sucrose solution (8x/day) over the enamel slabs. The formation of caries lesions (white spots) was evaluated by visual inspection under stereomicroscopy. Additionally, the dental slabs were sectioned and observed under polarized light microscopy. Data were submitted to Kruskal-Wallis test and Spearman's correlation test at 5% significance level. Polishing and bonding were not significant factors regarding white spot formation (p>;0.05). Biofilm control (brushing) was associated with reduction of caries formation close to the restorations (p<0.01). Polarized light microscopy confirmed the visual inspection findings. These results suggest that while microleakage and surface roughness did not influence caries lesion formation, biofilm control may prevent the enamel demineralization.

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Published

2009-02-01

Issue

Section

Original Articles

How to Cite

Influence of microleakage, surface roughness and biofilm control on secondary caries formation around composite resin restorations: an in situ evaluation . (2009). Journal of Applied Oral Science, 17(1), 61-65. https://doi.org/10.1590/S1678-77572009000100012