Impact of hydrogen peroxide photolysis on viable bacterial count and composition of in vivo dental biofilm—an ex vivo study
Midori Shirato, Anna Lehrkinder, Keisuke Nakamura, Taro Kanno, Peter Lingström, Ulf Örtengren

TL;DR
A new method using hydrogen peroxide and light to kill bacteria in dental biofilms was tested and found effective in reducing bacterial counts in real-world conditions.
Contribution
The study demonstrates the efficacy of hydrogen peroxide photolysis in killing in vivo dental biofilms for the first time.
Findings
Hydrogen peroxide photolysis reduced viable bacterial counts by 3.5 log CFU/specimen for total bacteria.
The treatment had a specific effect on streptococci, reducing them by 2.6 log CFU/specimen.
Bacterial proportions remained unchanged after regrowth, indicating no long-term community disruption.
Abstract
A bactericidal technique utilizing hydrogen peroxide (H₂O₂) photolysis, which generates hydroxyl radicals, was developed. Since it has demonstrated the potential to kill in vitro Streptococcus mutans biofilms, this technique has the possibility to be applied to dental caries. However, its efficacy on in vivo cariogenic dental biofilms remains unclear. This study aimed to evaluate the bactericidal effect of H₂O₂ photolysis on in vivo biofilms obtained from volunteers, focusing on its potential application in dental caries treatment. Sixteen participants, prescreened for the presence of S. mutans and/or lactobacilli in their saliva, wore custom-made splints with hydroxyapatite (HA) discs for 5 days. The discs with 5-day-old biofilms were subjected to H₂O₂ photolysis or control treatments such as H₂O₂, light-emitting diode (LED) irradiation, or water for 90 s, followed by bacterial…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOral microbiology and periodontitis research · Photodynamic Therapy Research Studies · Endodontics and Root Canal Treatments
