Abstract
AbstractBackgroundEntrococcus faecalis is a known cause of endodontic treatment failure. Synthetic drugs have been preferred for decades, but recently, many plants have been reported for their antibacterial activity.AimTo investigate the antibacterial effect of Gum Arabic (GA) processed with two different processing methods against Enterococcus faecalis.MethodAntibacterial susceptibility tests against Enterococcus faecalis (ATCC 29212) were performed for 200mg/ml ethanolic extracts of spray-dried and mechanically ground GA using Agar disc diffusion. Sodium Hypochlorite (1%), Chlorhexidine (0.2%), and Antibiotic multi-disc were used as positive controls, and ethanol (20%) as a negative. The inhibition zones diameters were measured.Serial dilutions of both types of Gum Arabic (100, 50, 25, 12.5 mg/ml) were tested for their antibacterial activity.ResultsIn Concentration 200 mg/ml, spray-dried GA displayed a significantly greater inhibition zone against E. faecalis than mechanically ground(P=0.02).Both types of Gum Arabic exhibited lower antibacterial activity than chlorhexidine (0.2%). However, only mechanically ground GA showed significant result(P=0.005).Spray-dried GA showed significantly higher antibacterial activity against than Tetracycline 300mcg(P=0.005).The antibacterial activity of spray-dried GA exceeded that of mechanically ground in all concentrations of serial dilutions, except for 12.5mg/ml, both are similar.Conclusionprocessing method of Gum Arabic affects its antibacterial potency against E. faecalis. In high concentrations, spray-dried GA is active antibacterial, while mechanically ground is non-active.Decreasing the concentration of mechanically ground GA increases its inhibitory effect, but the opposite effect was observed with spray-dried GA.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory