Methods
Dentin powder was made from coronal dentin of extracted human third molars. Standard amounts of dentin powder were tumbled with increasing concentrations of CHX (0-30 mM) for 30 min at 37 degrees C. After centrifuging the tubes, the supernatant was removed and the decrease in CHX concentration quantitated by UV-spectroscopy. CHX-treated dentin powder was resuspended in one of the four debinding solutions for 3 min. The amount of debound CHX in the solvents was also quantitated by UV-spectroscopy.
Results
As the CHX concentration in the medium increased, the CHX binding to mineralized dentin powder also increased up to 6.8 micromol/g of dry dentin powder. Demineralized dentin powder took up significantly (p<0.01) more CHX, reaching 30.1 micromol CHX/g of dry dentin powder. Debinding of CHX was in the order: HEMA<ethanol<0.05 M NaCl<water. The highest CHX binding to demineralized dentin occurred at 30 mM (1.5 wt.%). Significance: As CHX is not debound by HEMA, it may remain bound to demineralized dentin during resin-dentin bonding. This may be responsible for the long-term efficacy of CHX as an MMP inhibitor in resin-dentin bonds.
Significance
As CHX is not debound by HEMA, it may remain bound to demineralized dentin during resin-dentin bonding. This may be responsible for the long-term efficacy of CHX as an MMP inhibitor in resin-dentin bonds.
