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Oral microbial colonization on titanium and polyetheretherketone dental implant healing abutments: An in vitro and in vivo study Journal: Lasers in Medical Science

The Journal of Prosthetic Dentistry
27 May, 2024

The Result: PEEK (polyetheretherketone) and Ti (titanium) materials exhibited similar levels of fungal adhesion. PEEK initially limited in vitro polymicrobial adhesion for the first 48 hours of biofilm accumulation. Notably, when the PEEK was irradiated with the LiteTouch™ Er:YAG laser, decontamination proved more effective on PEEK surfaces, reducing microbial accumulation by approximately 11 times. In the in vivo study, PEEK material exhibited reduced levels of 6 bacterial species, including the putative pathogen Treponema denticola.

The Conclusion: The study found that while PEEK surfaces initially limited bacterial adhesion, this effect diminished over time. Therefore, the treatment with the LiteTouch™ Er:YAG laser significantly reduced the bacterial load on PEEK material, highlighting its effectiveness in maintaining a cleaner surface and reducing levels of periodontopathogens.

To read more about lasers in Implantology go to www.light-inst.com/applications/implantology/


Oral microbial colonization on titanium and polyetheretherketone dental implant healing abutments: An in vitro and in vivo study Journal: Lasers in Medical Science

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