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Inflammatory mediators in fluid extracted from the coronal occlusal dentine of trimmed teeth

Authors :
Kim A. Brogden
Mary M. Hogan
David H. Pashley
Teresa A. Morgan
M. Bridget Zimmerman
Yalan Li
Saulo Geraldeli
Leo Tjäderhane
Source :
Archives of Oral Biology. 57:264-270
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2012.

Abstract

Background Chemokines and cytokines may occur in dentinal fluids in response to local infection and inflammation. To test this hypothesis, we assessed the presence and concentration of inflammatory mediators in fluid extracted from the coronal occlusal dentine of trimmed teeth. Design Freshly extracted sound, carious, and restored molars were trimmed through the enamel to expose the underlying dentine, etched with 35% phosphoric acid, and rinsed. Fluid was extracted from the coronal occlusal dentine of these trimmed teeth by centrifugation at 2750 × g for 30 min. Results When assessed by MALDI-TOF, fluid extracted from the coronal occlusal dentine from 16 molars contained at least 117 peaks with different masses suggesting that this fluid was rich with molecules within the appropriate mass range of potential mediators. Indeed, when assessed for chemokines and cytokines, fluid extracted from the coronal occlusal dentine from 25 extracted molars with caries lesions, 10 extracted restored molars with occlusal amalgam, and 77 extracted sound molars contained IL-1β, TNF-α, IL-6, IL-8, IL-12(p70), and IL-10. A significant elevation was found for TNF-α ( p = 0.041) in extracted fluid from teeth restored with amalgam fillings. Conclusions Overall, fluid extracted from the coronal occlusal dentine of trimmed teeth may be useful in identifying proteins and other molecules in dentine and pulpal fluids and determining their role as mediators in the pathogenesis of oral infection and inflammation.

Details

ISSN :
00039969
Volume :
57
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Archives of Oral Biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....dd1e6aa60b7edf9a6e6c80c2e1e5279b