TY - JOUR
T1 - Synergistic effects of bacteria, enzymes, and cyclic mechanical stresses on the bond strength of composite restorations
AU - Montoya, Carolina
AU - Babariya, Mansi
AU - Ogwo, Chukwuebuka
AU - Querido, William
AU - Patel, Jay S.
AU - Melo, Mary Anne
AU - Orrego, Santiago
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2025/1
Y1 - 2025/1
N2 - Predicting how tooth and dental material bonds perform in the mouth requires a deep understanding of degrading factors. Yet, this understanding is incomplete, leading to significant uncertainties in designing and evaluating new dental adhesives. The durability of dental bonding interfaces in the oral microenvironment is compromised by bacterial acids, salivary enzymes, and masticatory fatigue. These factors degrade the bond between dental resins and tooth surfaces, making the strength of these bonds difficult to predict. Traditionally studied separately, a combined kinetic analysis of these interactions could enhance our understanding and improvement of dental adhesive durability. To address this issue, we developed and validated an original model to evaluate the bond strength of dental restorations using realistic environments that consider the different mechanical, chemical, and biological degradative challenges working simultaneously: bacteria, salivary esterases, and cyclic loading. We herein describe a comprehensive investigation on dissociating the factors that degrade the bond strength of dental restorations. Our results showed that cariogenic bacteria are the number one factor contributing to the degradation of the bonded interface, followed by cyclic loading and salivary esterases. When tested in combinatorial mode, negative and positive synergies towards the degradation of the interface were observed. Masticatory loads (i.e., cycling loading) enhanced the lactic acid bacterial production and the area occupied by the biofilm at the bonding interface, resulting in more damage at the interface and a reduction of 73 % in bond strength compared to no-degraded samples. Salivary enzymes also produced bond degradation caused by changes in the chemical composition of the resin/adhesive. However, the degradation rates are slowed compared to the bacteria and cyclic loading. These results demonstrate that our synergetic model could guide the design of new dental adhesives for biological applications without laborious trial-and-error experimentation.
AB - Predicting how tooth and dental material bonds perform in the mouth requires a deep understanding of degrading factors. Yet, this understanding is incomplete, leading to significant uncertainties in designing and evaluating new dental adhesives. The durability of dental bonding interfaces in the oral microenvironment is compromised by bacterial acids, salivary enzymes, and masticatory fatigue. These factors degrade the bond between dental resins and tooth surfaces, making the strength of these bonds difficult to predict. Traditionally studied separately, a combined kinetic analysis of these interactions could enhance our understanding and improvement of dental adhesive durability. To address this issue, we developed and validated an original model to evaluate the bond strength of dental restorations using realistic environments that consider the different mechanical, chemical, and biological degradative challenges working simultaneously: bacteria, salivary esterases, and cyclic loading. We herein describe a comprehensive investigation on dissociating the factors that degrade the bond strength of dental restorations. Our results showed that cariogenic bacteria are the number one factor contributing to the degradation of the bonded interface, followed by cyclic loading and salivary esterases. When tested in combinatorial mode, negative and positive synergies towards the degradation of the interface were observed. Masticatory loads (i.e., cycling loading) enhanced the lactic acid bacterial production and the area occupied by the biofilm at the bonding interface, resulting in more damage at the interface and a reduction of 73 % in bond strength compared to no-degraded samples. Salivary enzymes also produced bond degradation caused by changes in the chemical composition of the resin/adhesive. However, the degradation rates are slowed compared to the bacteria and cyclic loading. These results demonstrate that our synergetic model could guide the design of new dental adhesives for biological applications without laborious trial-and-error experimentation.
KW - Bacteria
KW - Biofilms
KW - Bonding strength
KW - Composite restoration
KW - Degradation
KW - Dental adhesives
KW - Dental caries
KW - Dental composites
KW - Dental materials
KW - Dental restoration failure
KW - Saliva esterases
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85205490490&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85205490490&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.bioadv.2024.214049
DO - 10.1016/j.bioadv.2024.214049
M3 - Article
C2 - 39368439
AN - SCOPUS:85205490490
SN - 2772-9508
VL - 166
JO - Biomaterials Advances
JF - Biomaterials Advances
M1 - 214049
ER -