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Development of Rat Caries-Induced Pulpitis Model for Vital Pulp Therapy

Authors :
H. Huang
M. Okamoto
M. Watanabe
S. Matsumoto
K. Moriyama
S. Komichi
M. Ali
S. Matayoshi
R. Nomura
K. Nakano
Y. Takahashi
M. Hayashi
Source :
Journal of Dental Research. 102:574-582
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2023.

Abstract

Rodent animal models for vital pulp therapy are commonly used in dental research because their tooth anatomy and cellular processes are similar to the anatomy and processes in humans. However, most studies have been conducted using uninfected sound teeth, which makes it difficult to adequately assess the inflammatory shift after vital pulp therapy. In the present study, we aimed to establish a caries-induced pulpitis model based on the conventional rat caries model and then evaluate inflammatory changes during the wound-healing process after pulp capping in a model of reversible pulpitis induced by carious infection. To establish the caries-induced pulpitis model, the pulpal inflammatory status was investigated at different stages of caries progression by immunostaining targeted to specific inflammatory biomarkers. Immunohistochemical staining revealed that both Toll-like receptor 2 and proliferating cell nuclear antigen were expressed in moderate and severe caries-stimulated pulp, indicating that an immune reaction occurred at both stages of caries progression. M2 macrophages were predominant in moderate caries-stimulated pulp, whereas M1 macrophages were predominant in the severe caries-stimulated pulp. Pulp capping in teeth with moderate caries (i.e., teeth with reversible pulpitis) led to complete tertiary dentin formation within 28 d after treatment. Impaired wound healing was observed in teeth with severe caries (i.e., teeth with irreversible pulpitis). During the wound-healing process in reversible pulpitis after pulp capping, M2 macrophages were predominant at all time points; their proliferative capacity was upregulated in the early stage of wound healing compared with healthy pulp. In conclusion, we successfully established a caries-induced pulpitis model for studies of vital pulp therapy. M2 macrophages have an important role in the early stages of the wound-healing process in reversible pulpitis.

Subjects

Subjects :
General Dentistry

Details

ISSN :
15440591 and 00220345
Volume :
102
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Dental Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........2ee340c7b5ee82086e1567a6602916c0
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/00220345221150383