Manabe A, Kaneko S, Numazawa S, Itoh K, Inoue M, Hisamitsu H, Sasa R, Yoshida T
Department of Operative Dentistry, School of Dentistry, Showa University, 1-5-8 Hatanodai, Shinagawa, Tokyo 142-8555, Japan.
Dent Mater J. 2000 Mar;19(1):75-86. doi: 10.4012/dmj.19.75.
The xenoestrogenic substance bisphenol-A is widely used as a synthetic precursor of resin monomers, such as bisphenol-A diglycidyl methacrylate. Reports describing the release of bisphenol-A from polymerized resin into saliva have aroused considerable concern regarding exposure to xenoestrogen by dental treatment. The purpose of the present study was to demonstrate a reliable methodology of detecting the trace amounts of bisphenol-A in dental materials. Bisphenol-A was separable from bisphenol-A diglycidyl methacrylate, which is often employed as the principal dimethacrylate monomer, by selective extraction with a Sep-Pak C18 cartridge. Using this extraction method in combination with a gas-chromatography mass-spectrometry, we have obtained evidence that all unpolymerized materials used in this study were contaminated with bisphenol-A. Quantitative analysis using a deuterium-labeled compound as an internal standard revealed bisphenol-A contents in commercial dental materials ranging from < 1 microgram/g material to about 20 micrograms/g material. The polymerized dental materials released up to 91.4 ng bisphenol-A/g material into phosphate buffered saline during 24-h incubation. These results indicate that bisphenol-A can be released from dental materials, however the leachable amount would be less than 1/1000 of the reported dose (2 micrograms/kg body weight/day) required for xenoestrogenisity in vivo.
异雌激素物质双酚A被广泛用作树脂单体的合成前体,如双酚A二甲基丙烯酸缩水甘油酯。有关双酚A从聚合树脂释放到唾液中的报道引起了人们对牙科治疗中接触异雌激素的极大关注。本研究的目的是证明一种检测牙科材料中痕量双酚A的可靠方法。通过使用Sep-Pak C18柱进行选择性萃取,可将双酚A与常作为主要二甲基丙烯酸酯单体的双酚A二甲基丙烯酸缩水甘油酯分离。将这种萃取方法与气相色谱-质谱联用,我们已获得证据表明本研究中使用的所有未聚合材料均被双酚A污染。使用氘标记化合物作为内标进行定量分析,结果显示市售牙科材料中的双酚A含量范围为每克材料小于1微克至约20微克。在24小时孵育期间,聚合牙科材料向磷酸盐缓冲盐水中释放的双酚A高达91.4纳克/克材料。这些结果表明双酚A可从牙科材料中释放出来,然而其可浸出量将低于体内产生异雌激素作用所需报道剂量(2微克/千克体重/天)的千分之一。