Investigation of the effect of Tideglusib on the hydroxyapatite formation, crystallinity and elasticity of conditioned resin-dentin interfaces
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Toledano Pérez, Manuel; Fernández-Romero, Enrique; Osorio, María T.; Osorio Ruiz, María Estrella; Sánchez Aguilera, Fátima; Toledano, Raquel; Osorio Ruiz, RaquelEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Dentin Microscopy Remineralization TEM Tideglusib XRD
Fecha
2024-08-30Referencia bibliográfica
Toledano M, Fernández-Romero E, Osorio MT, et al. Investigation of the effect of Tideglusib on the hydroxyapatite formation, crystallinity and elasticity of conditioned resin-dentin interfaces. J Dent. Published online August 30, 2024. doi:10.1016/j.jdent.2024.105334
Patrocinador
MCIN/AEI 10.13039/501100011033 PID2020–114694RB-I00; Universidad de Granada / CBUAResumen
Objectives: To investigate the effect of dentin infiltration with polymeric nanoparticles (NPs) doped with tideglusib
(TDg) (TDg-NPs) on hydroxyapatite formation, crystallinity and elasticity of conditioned resin-dentin
interfaces.
Methods: Dentin conditioned surfaces were infiltrated with NPs or TDg-NPs. Bonded interfaces were created,
stored for 24 h and submitted to mechanical and thermal challenging. Resin-dentin interfaces were evaluated
through nanoindentation to determine the modulus of elasticity, X-ray diffraction and transmission electron
microscopy through selected area diffraction and bright-filed imaging.
Results: TDg-NPs provoked peaks narrowing after the diffraction-intensity analysis that corresponded with high
crystallinity, with an increased modulus of Young after load cycling in comparison with the samples treated with
undoped NPs. New minerals, in the group of TDg-NPs, showed the greatest both deviation of line profile from
perfect crystal diffraction and dimension of the lattice strain, i.e., crystallite, grain size and microstrain and 002
plane-texture. The new minerals generated after TDg-NPs application and mechanical loading followed a well
defined lineation. Undoped NPs mostly produced small hydroxyapatite crystallites, non crystalline or amorphous
in nature with poor maturity.
Conclusions: Tideglusib promoted the precipitation of hydroxyapatite, as a major crystalline phase, at the
intrafibrillar compartment of the collagen fibrils, enabling functional mineralization. TDg-NPs facilitated
nucleation of crystals randomly oriented, showing less structural variation in angles and distances that improved
crystallographic relative order of atoms and maturity. Nanocrystals inducted by TDg-NPs were hexagonal prisms
of submicron size. Thermal challenging of dentin treated with TDg-NPs have provoked a decrease of functional
mineralization and crystallinity, associated to immature hydroxyapatite.
Clinical significance: New polycrystalline lattice formation generated after TDg-NPs infiltration may become
correlated with high mechanical performance. This association can be inferred from the superior crystallinity
that was obtained in presence of tideglusib. Immature crystallites formed in dentin treated with undoped NPs
will account for a high remineralizing activity.