The Remineralization of EDTA–Treated Human Dentine

Abstract
The remineralization of whole human dentine treated with a neutral EDTA solution was investigated: the treatment periods were 15, 30 and 120 min. From the literature it is known that EDTA removes noncollagenous proteins (NCPs) from dentine powders. In order to extract more phosphoproteins from dentine lesions, in part of this work samples were also treated with 1 M NaCl or 4 M guanidine chloride solutions. All the dentine samples after the treatments mentioned were immersed subsequently in a remineralizing solution without fluoride for 2 weeks and microradiographed. To investigate the effects of fluoride, samples treated with EDTA for 120 min were also remineralized with 2ppm fluoride in solution. The results presented show that: (1) Measurable remineralization did not occur when fluoride was free in the remineralizing solution. Because remineralization occurred neither at the lesion front nor in the nonmineral part of the surface–softened tissue, presumably the NCPs (inhibitors) of underlying dentine diffused into the tissue during the remineralization period. (2) 2ppm fluoride caused remineralization at the lesion front. In this case we assume fluoride either acted as nucleating agent or overcame the NCP effects at the lesion front.

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