Critical hydrodynamic force levels for efficient removal of oral biofilms in simulated interdental spaces
Merima Hotic, Mario Ackermann, Joshua Bopp, Norbert Hofmann, Lamprini Karygianni, Pune Nina Paqué

TL;DR
This study finds that at least 20 Pa of hydrodynamic force is needed to start removing oral biofilms, but antiseptics are also needed for effective removal.
Contribution
The study identifies critical hydrodynamic force thresholds for biofilm removal and highlights the need for antiseptics.
Findings
Untreated biofilms had 7.7E7 CFU/harvest, significantly higher than treated groups.
CFU reductions of two orders of magnitude occurred at hydrodynamic forces above 45 Pa.
Hydrodynamic forces alone are insufficient; antiseptics are necessary for effective biofilm disruption.
Abstract
Sonic toothbrushes generate hydrodynamic shear forces for oral biofilm removal on tooth surfaces, but the effective thresholds for biofilm removal remain unexplored. This in vitro study aimed to investigate various threshold values for hydrodynamic biofilm removal in vitro. A specialized test bench was designed with a known water flow field within a gap, ensuring that hydrodynamic shear forces on the wall were solely dependent on the volume flow, which was quantifiable using an integrated flow meter and proven by a computational fluid dynamics simulation. A young 20 h supragingival six-species biofilm was developed on hydroxyapatite disks (∅ 5 mm) and applied into the test bench, subjecting them to ascending force levels ranging from 0 to 135 Pa. The remaining biofilms were quantified using colony forming units (CFU) and subjected to statistical analysis through one-way ANOVA. Volume…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOral microbiology and periodontitis research · Periodontal Regeneration and Treatments · Drilling and Well Engineering
