Lamblin, Guillaume
[UCL]
Leprince, Julian
[UCL]
Devaux, Jacques
[UCL]
Mestdagh, Michèle
[UCL]
Gallez, Bernard
[UCL]
Leloup, Gaëtane
[UCL]
It is well known that polymeric free radicals remain trapped inside dental resins for a long time after photopolymerization. Moreover, although these high molecular mass compounds have very limited mobility, there is evidence to suggest that they disappear progressively over time. The purpose of this study was to provide new experimental data to help understand this phenomenon. To determine whether low molecular mass free radicals are released by dental composites stored in hydrophilic media, we used electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy to perform spin-trapping experiments on experimental and commercial samples stored in ethanol. Under these conditions, ethoxy radicals were produced. Further experiments demonstrated that hydroxyl radicals were firstly released from the methacrylated resin and secondly that they reacted with ethanol molecules to produce "secondary" ethoxy free radicals. In addition to the well-known monomer toxicity of methacrylated resins, we may have identified a new source of concern for these biomaterials.
Bibliographic reference |
Lamblin, Guillaume ; Leprince, Julian ; Devaux, Jacques ; Mestdagh, Michèle ; Gallez, Bernard ; et. al. Hydroxyl radical release from dental resins : EPR evidence. In: Acta Biomaterialia, Vol. 6, no. 8, p. 3193-3198 (2010) |
Permanent URL |
http://hdl.handle.net/2078.1/30463 |