Vogel G L, Zhang Z, Carey C M, Ly A, Chow L C, Proskin H M
American Dental Association Health Foundation, Paffenbarger Research Center, National Institute of Standards and Technology, Gaithersburg, MD 20899, USA.
J Dent Res. 2000 Jan;79(1):58-62. doi: 10.1177/00220345000790010901.
Previous studies demonstrated that the chewing of a 2.5% (mass fraction) alpha-tricalcium-phosphate-fortified (alpha-TCP) experimental chewing gum released sufficient calcium and phosphate to eliminate any fall in the tooth mineral saturation of plaque fluid after a sucrose rinse (Vogel et al., 1998). In contrast, the chewing of a conventional sugar-free gum did not eliminate this decrease in saturation. The purpose of this study was to examine if the release of ions from plaque calcium-phosphate pools induced by this gum could provide protection during subsequent exposure to cariogenic conditions. Fourteen subjects accumulated plaque for 48 hrs, fasted overnight, chewed a control or experimental gum for 15 min, and subsequently rinsed 1 min with a mass fraction 10% sucrose solution. Before gum chewing, and at 7 min and 15 min afterward, whole plaque, plaque fluid, and salivary samples were obtained and analyzed by micro-analytical techniques. Additional samples were collected and analyzed at 25 min (7 min after the sucrose rinse). Although the results confirmed the deposition of large amounts of calcium and phosphates in plaque seen in the previous study, only a small increase was seen in plaque-fluid-free calcium and phosphate before sucrose administration. This suggests that few of the mineral ions were mobilized under non-cariogenic conditions. However, 7 min after the sucrose rinsing, an increase in these concentrations was seen which, based on hydroxyapatite ion activity product calculations, indicated a decrease in the driving force for demineralization compared with that seen with the control gum. These results suggest that the chewing of the experimental gum deposits a labile mineral reservoir in plaque that can resist a subsequent cariogenic challenge.
先前的研究表明,咀嚼含2.5%(质量分数)α-磷酸三钙强化(α-TCP)的实验性口香糖可释放足够的钙和磷,以消除蔗糖冲洗后菌斑液中牙齿矿物质饱和度的任何下降(Vogel等人,1998年)。相比之下,咀嚼传统无糖口香糖并不能消除这种饱和度的下降。本研究的目的是检验这种口香糖诱导菌斑磷酸钙池释放离子是否能在随后暴露于致龋条件下提供保护。14名受试者积累菌斑48小时,禁食过夜,咀嚼对照或实验口香糖15分钟,随后用质量分数为10%的蔗糖溶液冲洗1分钟。在咀嚼口香糖前、咀嚼后7分钟和15分钟,采集全菌斑、菌斑液和唾液样本,并通过微量分析技术进行分析。在25分钟(蔗糖冲洗后7分钟)采集并分析额外的样本。尽管结果证实了先前研究中所见的大量钙和磷在菌斑中的沉积,但在给予蔗糖前,菌斑液中游离钙和磷仅略有增加。这表明在非致龋条件下很少有矿物质离子被动员。然而,在蔗糖冲洗后7分钟,这些浓度有所增加,根据羟基磷灰石离子活性产物计算,与对照口香糖相比,脱矿驱动力有所降低。这些结果表明,咀嚼实验性口香糖可在菌斑中沉积一个不稳定的矿物质储备库,该储备库可抵抗随后的致龋挑战。