Affiliation:
1. NIOM-Scandinavian Institute of Dental Materials, Kirkeveien 71B, PO Box 70, N-1305 Haslum, Norway;
2. Institute of Odontology, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Copenhagen, Denmark
Abstract
Present tooth-bleaching techniques are based upon hydrogen peroxide as the active agent. It is applied directly, or produced in a chemical reaction from sodium perborate or carbamide peroxide. More than 90% immediate success has been reported for intracoronal bleaching of non-vital teeth, and in the period of 1–8 years’ observation time, from 10 to 40% of the initially successfully treated teeth needed re-treatment. Cervical root resorption is a possible consequence of internal bleaching and is more frequently observed in teeth treated with the thermo-catalytic procedure. When the external tooth-bleaching technique is used, the first subjective change in tooth color may be observed after 2–4 nights of tooth bleaching, and more than 90% satisfactory results have been reported. Tooth sensitivity is a common side-effect of external tooth bleaching observed in 15%-78% of the patients, but clinical studies addressing the risk of other adverse effects are lacking. Direct contact with hydrogen peroxide induced genotoxic effects in bacteria and cultured cells, whereas the effect was reduced or abolished in the presence of metabolizing enzymes. Several tumor-promoting studies, including the hamster cheek pouch model, indicated that hydrogen peroxide might act as a promoter. Multiple exposures of hydrogen peroxide have resulted in localized effects on the gastric mucosa, decreased food consumption, reduced weight gain, and blood chemistry changes in mice and rats. Our risk assessment revealed that a sufficient safety level was not reached in certain clinical situations of external tooth bleaching, such as bleaching one tooth arch with 35% carbamide peroxide, using several applications per day of 22% carbamide peroxide, and bleaching both arches simultaneously with 22% carbamide peroxide. The recommendation is to avoid using concentrations higher than 10% carbamide peroxide when one performs external bleaching. We advocate a selective use of external tooth bleaching based on high ethical standards and professional judgment.
Subject
General Dentistry,Otorhinolaryngology
Reference116 articles.
1. Abou-Rass M (1998). Long-term prognosis of intentional endodontics and internal bleaching of tetracycline-stained teeth. Compend Contin Educ Dent 19:1034–1044.
2. External root resorption after bleaching: A case report
3. Anitua E, Zabalegui B, Gil J, Gascon F (1990). Internal bleaching of severe tetracycline discolorations: four-year clinical evaluation. Quintessence Int 21:783–788.
4. In vitro comparison of different types of sodium perborate used for intracoronal bleaching of discoloured teeth
5. Baratieri LN, Ritter AV, Monteiro S, de Andrada MAC, Vieira LCC (1995). Nonvital tooth bleaching: guidelines for the clinician. Quintessence Int 26:597–608.
Cited by
369 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献