Walsh Laurence J
Faculty of Health and Behavioural Sciences, The University of Queensland School of Dentistry, UQ Oral Health Centre, 288 Herston Road, Herston, QLD 4006, Australia.
Antibiotics (Basel). 2020 Mar 20;9(3):129. doi: 10.3390/antibiotics9030129.
Biofilms located within the root canals of teeth are a unique and pressing concern in dentistry and in medical microbiology. These multispecies biofilms, which include fungi as well as bacteria, form in a protected site with low shear stress and low oxygen tension. Systemic antibiotics are of limited value because of the lack of blood flow of the site, and issues with innate and acquired resistance. Physical disruption using hand or rotary powered instruments does not reach all locations in the root canal system where biofilms are present. Alternative strategies including agitated irrigation fluids, continuous chelation, materials with highly alkaline pH, and antimicrobial nanoparticles are being explored to meet the challenge. Detection and quantification of biofilms using fluorescence-based optical methods could provide an indication of successful biofilm removal and an endpoint for physical and chemical treatments.
牙齿根管内的生物膜是牙科和医学微生物学中一个独特且紧迫的问题。这些包含真菌和细菌的多物种生物膜,形成于一个剪切应力低且氧张力低的受保护部位。由于该部位血流缺乏以及固有和获得性耐药问题,全身用抗生素的价值有限。使用手动或旋转动力器械进行物理破坏无法触及根管系统中存在生物膜的所有部位。正在探索包括搅拌冲洗液、持续螯合、高碱性pH值材料和抗菌纳米颗粒在内的替代策略来应对这一挑战。使用基于荧光的光学方法检测和定量生物膜,可以为生物膜的成功清除提供指示,并为物理和化学治疗提供终点指标。