Titanium Surfaces & Biofilms

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      Harrison
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        Clin Oral Implants Res. 2011 Dec 13. doi: 10.1111/j.1600-0501.2011.02364.x. [Epub ahead of print]

        The adhesion of oral bacteria to modified titanium surfaces: role of plasma proteins and electrostatic forces.

        Badihi Hauslich L, Sela MN, Steinberg D, Rosen G, Kohavi D.

        Source

        Oral Microbiology and Ecology Lab, Betty and Walter Cohen Chair for Periodontal Research, The Hebrew, Jerusalem, Israel.

        Abstract

        OBJECTIVES:

        Modifications of titanium (Ti) implant surfaces have a significant effect on early biofilm formation and the outcome of implant procedures. The aim of this study was to examine the role of plasma proteins and electrostatic forces in the adhesion mechanism of oral bacteria to modified Ti surfaces.

        MATERIALS AND METHODS:

        Ti discs with three different types of surface modifications, machined, acid-etched, and acid-etched and blasted, were examined for adhesion of oral bacteria: Streptococcus mutans, Porphyromonas gingivalis, and Fusobacterium nucleatum. Following pretreatment of the Ti with ion rich solutions or coating by human serum albumin or fibronectin, bacterial adhesion was examined by scanning electron microscopy and assessed quantitatively by DNA analysis. Ti coating by proteins as well as bacterial adhesion and their interrelationships were further investigated through confocal scanning laser microscopy.

        RESULTS:

        Acid-etched and blasted Ti surfaces exhibited significantly higher amounts of bacteria adhesion than the other two surfaces. Calcium was found to serve as a bridging agent in the adhesion process of S. mutans and F. nucleatum to Ti surfaces. Although albumin coating of the Ti reduced the adhesion of S. mutans to all surfaces, it had no influence on the adhesion of P. gingivalis or F. nucleatum. Coating the Ti with fibronectin enhanced P. gingivalis and F. nucleatum adhesion.

        CONCLUSIONS:

        Bacterial adhesion to Ti surfaces is roughness-dependent, and the adhesion mechanism is influenced by ions and proteins of the initial coating derived from the blood.

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