Effect of the anti-Alzheimer drug GSK-3β antagonist on numerical modeling of the energy dissipation through the resin-dentin interface
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Toledano Pérez, Manuel; Fernández-Romero, Enrique; Osorio Ruiz, María Estrella; Sánchez Aguilera, Fátima; D. Lynch, Christopher; Osorio Ruiz, María Estrella; Toledano, Raquel; Osorio Ruiz, RaquelEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Mineralized dentin Tideglusib Nano-DMA
Date
2024-11-13Referencia bibliográfica
Toledano Pérez, M. et. al. Dental Materials 40 (2024) 1909–1919. [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dental.2024.09.005]
Sponsorship
Grant PID2020–114694RB-I00 funded by MCIN/AEI 10.13039/501100011033; Universidad de Granada / CBUAAbstract
conditioned dentin infiltrated with polymeric nanoparticles (NPs) doped with tideglusib (TDg) (TDg-NPs).
Methods: Dentin conditioned surfaces were infiltrated with NPs and TDg-NPs. Bonded interfaces were created,
stored for 24 h and submitted to mechanical and thermal challenging. Resin-dentin interfaces were evaluated
through nano-DMA/complex-loss-storage moduli-tan delta assessment and atomic force microscopy (AFM)
analysis.
Results: Dentin infiltrated with NPs and load cycled attained the highest complex modulus at hybrid layer and
bottom of hybrid layer. Intertubular dentin treated with undoped NPs showed higher complex modulus than
peritubular dentin, after load cycling, provoking energy concentration and breakdown at the interface. After
infiltrating with TDg-NPs, complex modulus was similar between peri-intertubular dentin and energy dissipated
homogeneously. Tan delta at intertubular dentin was higher than at peritubular dentin, after using TDg-NPs and
load cycling. This generated the widest bandwidth of the collagen fibrils and bridge-like mineral structures that,
as sight of energy dissipation, fastened active dentin remodeling. TDg-NPs inducted scarce mineralization after
thermo-cycling, but these bridging processes limited breakdown zones at the interface.
Significance: TDg-based NPs are then proposed for effective dentin remineralization and tubular seal, from a
viscoelastic approach.