Alkaline Sodium Hypochlorite Irrigant and Its Chemical Interactions

Materials (Basel). 2017 Sep 29;10(10):1147. doi: 10.3390/ma10101147.

Abstract

Endodontic irrigating solutions may interact chemically with one another. This is important, because even when solutions are not admixed, they will come into contact with one another during an alternating irrigation technique, forming unwanted by-products, which may be toxic or irritant. Mixing or alternating irrigants can also reduce their ability to clean and disinfect the root canal system of teeth by changing their chemical structure with subsequent loss of the active agent, or by inducing precipitate formation in the root canal system. Precipitates occlude dental tubules, resulting in less penetration of antimicrobials and a loss of disinfection efficacy. Sodium hypochlorite is not only a very reactive oxidizing agent, but is also the most commonly used endodontic irrigant. As such, many interactions occurring between it and other irrigants, chelators and other antimicrobials, may occur. Of particular interest is the interaction between sodium hypochlorite and the chelators EDTA, citric acid and etidronate and between sodium hypochlorite and the antimicrobials chlorhexidine, alexidine, MTAD and octenisept.

Keywords: EDTA; MTAD; alexidine; chlorhexidine; citric acid; clinical implications; endodontic irrigant interactions; etidronate; octenisept; sodium hypochlorite.

Publication types

  • Review