Antimicrobial residual effects of irrigation regimens with maleic acid in infected root canals
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Ferrer Luque, Carmen María; González Castillo, Silvia; Ruiz Linares, Matilde; Arias Moliz, María Teresa; Rodríguez Archilla, Alberto; Baca García, María PilarEditorial
Springer Nature
Materia
Cetrimide Chlorhexidine Enterococcus faecalis
Fecha
2015-02-15Referencia bibliográfica
Ferrer-Luque, C.M., González-Castillo, S., Ruiz-Linares, M. et al. Antimicrobial residual effects of irrigation regimens with maleic acid in infected root canals. J of Biol Res-Thessaloniki 22, 1 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1186/s40709-015-0025-4
Patrocinador
Research Group CTS-167 of the Junta de Andalucía, SpainResumen
Background
The success of endodontic treatment depends largely on the control of microorganisms present in infected root canals. The aim of this study was to determine the residual antimicrobial activity of several final irrigation protocols with 7% maleic acid (MA) alone and combined with chlorhexidine (CHX), cetrimide (CTR) or both, in root canals infected with Enterococcus faecalis. Biofilms of E. faecalis were grown in uniradicular roots for 4 weeks. A total of 72 specimens were divided into 5 experimental groups according to the final irrigation regime used: Group 1: 2.5% NaOCl; Group 2: 7% MA; Group 3: 7% MA + 0.2% CTR; Group 4: 7% MA + 2% CHX; Group 5: 7% MA + 0.2% CTR + 2% CHX; and Control group: 0.9% saline solution. Twelve roots (2/group) that were instrumented and not infected served as negative or sterility controls. The proportion of ungrown samples over 60 days was evaluated using non-parametric Kaplan-Meier survival analysis. Differences among groups were tested using the log-rank test (p< 0.05).
Results
The association of MA with CHX and CHX + CTR as final irrigating solutions showed the best results, 5 and 4 samples out of 12, respectively, and without differences between them (p = 0.928), followed by 7% MA + 0.2% CTR with 7 out of 12. The 7% MA (11/12) group showed significant differences with respect to the groups in which MA was combined with CHX (p < 0.005) and CHX + CTR (p < 0.005).
Conclusion
Final irrigating solutions of 7% MA combined with 2% CHX or 2% CHX + 0.2% CTR were found to effectively improve antimicrobial root canal disinfection.