Effects of Calcium and Phosphate on Dissolution of Enamel, Dentin and Hydroxyapatite in Citric Acid.
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BORIS DOI
PubMed ID
36861646
Description
The aim was to evaluate the effect of dissolved calcium and phosphate on dissolution rate of enamel, dentin and compressed hydroxyapatite (HA) in citric acid solution as a function of pH. At pH 2.5, dissolution rate of enamel increased significantly by 6% in 20 mmol/L added calcium but, otherwise, dissolution rates of neither enamel, dentin nor HA were significantly affected by 10 or 20 mmol/L calcium. However, enamel dissolution rate was reduced by > 50 mmol/L calcium. At pH 3.25 and 4.0, 10-20 mmol/L calcium inhibited dissolution of enamel by 29-100% and HA by 65-75% but did not affect dentin dissolution. Phosphate (10 or 20 mmol/L) did not inhibit dissolution of enamel, dentin or HA at any pH, but there were increases in dissolution rate of all three substrates at pH 2.5 and, in one test with dentine (at 20 mmol/L phosphate), at pH 3.25. The results suggest that calcium addition to soft drinks and other acidic products such as medications may reduce erosivity against enamel, provided that pH is not too low; that phosphate would not reduce erosivity against enamel; and that neither calcium nor phosphate at these concentrations would reduce erosivity against dentin.
Date of Publication
2023-07-10
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
Keyword(s)
Calcium Dental erosion Dentin Dissolution Enamel Hydroxyapatite Phosphate pH-stat
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Shellis, R Peter | |
Barbour, Michele E | |
Parker, David M | |
Addy, Martin |
Additional Credits
Series
Swiss dental journal
Publisher
Schweizerische Zahnärzte-Gesellschaft SSO
ISSN
2296-6498
Access(Rights)
restricted