The impact of biological properties of bioactive glasses on enamel during artificial erosive tooth wear
Dimitrios Dionysopoulos, Petros Mourouzis, Avraam Konstantinidis, Lambrini Papadopoulou, Kosmas Tolidis, Robert G. Hill

TL;DR
This study shows that air-abrasion with bioactive glasses can protect tooth enamel from erosion and abrasion, especially in patients with conditions like GERD.
Contribution
The novel contribution is demonstrating the protective effect of two bioactive glasses against erosive tooth wear using a simulated GERD-related model.
Findings
BAG treatments reduced enamel surface loss by 38.7–46.7% and increased surface hardness by 6.3–8.9%.
No significant differences were found between the two bioactive glasses used in the study.
Enamel morphology and composition changes were observed in BAG-treated groups compared to the control.
Abstract
The aim of this study was to evaluate the protective effect of air-abrasion with two bioactive glasses (BAGs) on enamel surface against erosion/abrasion challenge. Thirty human third molars were collected, and enamel specimens were prepared and randomly assigned to three groups (n = 10): control group, where specimens received no treatment and BAG groups, where enamel was air-abraded once for 10 seconds with BioMinF® and ProSylc™, respectively. The operational parameters were: air pressure 20 psi, powder flow rate dial 1 g/min and nozzle-surface distance 5 mm. The samples were submerged in a 0.01 M HCl solution for 2 minutes and then placed in a remineralizing solution for 2 hours (five times daily). At the end of each day, the samples were stored in the remineralizing solution for 14 hours. Thirty minutes after the initial and final erosive challenges of the day, an abrasion challenge…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDental Erosion and Treatment · Dental materials and restorations · Oral microbiology and periodontitis research
