Response of human pulps after professionally applied vital tooth bleaching
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Wiley-Blackwell
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Abstract
P>AimTo evaluate in vivo the microscopic pulpal response in sound human premolar teeth subjected to vital tooth bleaching with a 38% hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) bleaching gel (Opalescence X-tra Boost) catalysed or not by a halogen light source.MethodologyTwelve pairs of sound maxillary and/or mandibular premolar teeth from 12 to 18-year-old patients were selected and randomly assigned to the following experimental (n = 10) and control (n = 4) groups: group 1: bleaching gel + halogen light; group 2: bleaching gel; group 3: no treatment (control). The teeth were extracted 2-15 days after bleaching and were subjected to routine laboratory processing for histological analysis of the pulpal response under light microscopy.ResultsIn almost all specimens of the experimental groups, the pulp tissue exhibited histological characteristics of normality. Only one specimen in each group exhibited some dilated and congested blood vessels among a discrete number of mononuclear inflammatory cells in the peripheral pulp region related to the buccal surface of the tooth. These specimens had a slight disruption to the odontoblastic layer, which characterized discrete tissue disorganization. Some deposition of reactionary dentine occurred in only one specimen of group 2.ConclusionsProfessionally applied vital tooth bleaching with a 38% H(2)O(2) gel with or without activation by a halogen light source did not cause damage to the pulp tissue of sound human premolar teeth.
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Keywords
hydrogen peroxide, material testing, metabolism, odontoblasts, tooth bleaching
Language
English
Citation
International Endodontic Journal. Malden: Wiley-blackwell, v. 43, n. 7, p. 572-580, 2010.





