Title of article
A comparison between red and infrared light for recording pulpal blood flow from human anterior teeth with a laser Doppler flow meter
Author/Authors
Kijsamanmith، نويسنده , , Kanittha and Timpawat، نويسنده , , Siriporn and Vongsavan، نويسنده , , Noppakun and Matthews، نويسنده , , Bruce، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Pages
5
From page
614
To page
618
Abstract
Objective
pare red (635 nm) and infrared (780 nm) light for recording pulpal blood flow from human anterior teeth with a laser Doppler flow meter.
ings were made from 7 healthy teeth in 5 subjects (aged 22–55 years) using a laser Doppler flow meter (Periflux 4001) equipped with both red and infrared lasers. Average blood flow signals were obtained with both light sources alternately from each tooth under five conditions: intact tooth without opaque rubber dam, intact tooth with dam, after injecting local anaesthetic (3% Mepivacaine) (LA) over the apex of the tooth and cavity preparation to almost expose the pulp, after removal and replacement of the pulp, and with the root canal empty.
s
nfrared light, because of technical limitations, data were obtained for the first three conditions only. The dam significantly decreased the mean blood flow by 82%. Injecting LA and cavity preparation had no significant effect. With red light, dam produced a decrease of 56%, and the resulting signal was reduced by 33% after LA and cavity preparation. The remaining signal fell by 46% after pulp removal and replacement. This contribution of the pulp is similar to that recorded previously with infrared light. There was no significant further change when the pulp was finally removed.
sions
portance of using opaque rubber dam is confirmed. With dam, there is no advantage to using red rather than infrared light, and in each case the pulp contributes less than 50% to the blood flow signal.
Keywords
Laser Doppler flow meter , Human anterior teeth , pulpal blood flow
Journal title
Archives of Oral Biology
Serial Year
2011
Journal title
Archives of Oral Biology
Record number
1806254
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