Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dental.2022.06.025
Title: Characterization of silver diamine fluoride cytotoxicity using microfluidic tooth-on-a-chip and gingival equivalents
Authors: Hu, Shijia 
Muniraj, Giridharan
Mishra, Apurva
Hong, Kanglun 
Li Lum, Jing 
Hong, Catherine Hsu Ling 
Rosa, Vinicius 
Sriram, Gopu 
Keywords: Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Technology
Dentistry, Oral Surgery & Medicine
Materials Science, Biomaterials
Materials Science
Microfluidics
3D culture
Silver diamine fluoride
Biocompatibility
Dental pulp stem cells
Gingiva
Tooth-on-a-chip
IN-VITRO
PERMEABILITY
PH
SKIN
Issue Date: Aug-2022
Publisher: ELSEVIER SCI LTD
Citation: Hu, Shijia, Muniraj, Giridharan, Mishra, Apurva, Hong, Kanglun, Li Lum, Jing, Hong, Catherine Hsu Ling, Rosa, Vinicius, Sriram, Gopu (2022-08). Characterization of silver diamine fluoride cytotoxicity using microfluidic tooth-on-a-chip and gingival equivalents. DENTAL MATERIALS 38 (8) : 1385-1394. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dental.2022.06.025
Abstract: Objective: This study aims to characterize the cytotoxicity potential of silver diamine fluoride (SDF) on dental pulp stem cells (DPSC) and gingival equivalents. Methods: DPSC cultured on 96-well plates was exposed directly to SDF (0.0001–0.01%) and cell viability (IC50) quantified. Effect of SDF on DPSC viability under flow (with dentin barrier) conditions was evaluated using a custom-designed microfluidic "tooth-on-a-chip”. Permeability of dentin discs (0.5–1.5 mm thickness) was evaluated using lucifer yellow permeation assay. Dentin discs were treated with 38% SDF (up to 3 h), and cell viability (live/dead assay) of the DPSC cultured in the inlet (unexposed) and outlet (exposed) regions of the pulp channel was evaluated. To assess the mucosal corrosion potential, gingival equivalents were treated with 38% SDF for 3 or 60 min (OECD test guideline 431) and characterized by MTT assay and histomorphometric analysis. Results: DPSC exposed directly to SDF showed a dose-dependent reduction in cell viability (IC50: 0.001%). Inlet channels (internal control) of the tooth-on-a-chip exposed to PBS and SDF-exposed dentin discs showed> 85% DPSC viability. In contrast, the outlet channels of SDF-exposed dentin discs showed a decreased viability of< 31% and 0% (1.5 and ≤1.0 mm thick dentin disc, respectively) (p < 0.01). The gingiva equivalents treated with SDF for 3 and 60 min demonstrated decreased epithelial integrity, loss of intercellular cohesion and corneal layer detachment with significant reduction in intact epithelial thickness (p < 0.05). Significance: SDF penetrated the dentin (≤1 mm thick) inducing significant death of the pulp cells. SDF also disrupted gingival epithelial integrity resulting in mucosal corrosion.
Source Title: DENTAL MATERIALS
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/247467
ISSN: 0109-5641
1879-0097
DOI: 10.1016/j.dental.2022.06.025
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