Title of article :
Biocompatibility effects of indirect exposure of base-metal dental casting alloys to a human-derived three-dimensional oral mucosal model
Author/Authors :
McGinley، نويسنده , , Emma Louise and Moran، نويسنده , , Gary P. and Fleming، نويسنده , , Garry J.P.، نويسنده ,
Pages :
10
From page :
1091
To page :
1100
Abstract :
AbstractObjectives udy employed a three-dimensional (3D) human-derived oral mucosal model to assess the biocompatibility of base-metal dental casting alloys ubiquitous in fixed prosthodontic and orthodontic dentistry. s ucosal models were generated using primary human oral keratinocyte and gingival fibroblast cells seeded onto human de-epidermidised dermal scaffolds. Nickel–chromium (Ni–Cr) and cobalt–chromium (Co–Cr) base-metal alloy immersion solutions were exposed to oral mucosal models for increasing time periods (2–72 h). Analysis methodologies (histology, viable cell counts, oxidative stress, cytokine expression and toxicity) were performed following exposure. s ed alloy immersion solutions elicited significantly decreased cell viability (P < 0.0004) with increased oxidative stress (P < 0.0053), inflammatory cytokine expression (P < 0.0077) and cellular toxicity levels (P < 0.0001) compared with the controls. However, the Ni-free Co–Cr-based alloy immersion solutions did not elicit adverse oxidative stress (P > 0.4755) or cellular toxicity (P < 0.2339) responses compared with controls. sions gh the multiple analyses highlighted Ni–Cr base-metal alloy immersion solutions elicited significantly detrimental effects to the oral mucosal models, it was possible to distinguish between Ni–Cr alloys using the approach employed. The study employed a 3D human-derived full-thickness differentiated oral mucosal model suitable for biocompatibility assessment of base-metal dental casting alloys through discriminatory experimental parameters. al significance sing incidences of Ni hypersensitivity in the general population warrants serious consideration from dental practitioners and patients alike where fixed prosthodontic/orthodontic dental treatments are the treatment modality involved. The novel and analytical oral mucosal model has the potential to significantly contribute to the advancement of reproducible dental medical device and dental material appraisals.
Keywords :
Biocompatibility , Tissue engineering , cytotoxicity , inflammation , Dental casting alloys
Journal title :
Astroparticle Physics
Record number :
2039896
Link To Document :
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