Effect of toothpaste tablets on gloss and surface roughness of resin-based composite materials

Am J Dent. 2023 Jun;36(3):156-160.

Abstract

Purpose: To evaluate the effects of toothpaste tablets on the gloss and surface roughness of resin-based composite materials and determine the relationship between gloss and roughness.

Methods: Rectangular jigs were designed and printed. Wells (2 mm deep x 7 mm diameter) were filled with Filtek Supreme Ultra A2B, light-cured and polished. A small-area glossmeter was used for gloss (GU) measurements and a profilometer for roughness measurements (Ra) at baseline and after challenge with each toothpaste. An automated tooth-brushing machine was set at 120 strokes/minute for a total of 10,000 strokes to evaluate four test groups with 16 specimens in each group. NC: Brushing with distilled water; TABS: Colgate Anywhere Travel Tooth Tabs; CP: Colgate Cavity Protection Toothpaste and AW: Colgate Whitening Advanced Toothpaste. Kruskal-Wallis test was used to test the difference in gloss and surface roughness among the groups and Pearson correlation was used to compare the relationship between gloss and roughness.

Results: There was no statistically significant difference in gloss and roughness among the four groups at baseline. At post-brushing, there was a statistically significant difference among the groups (P< 0.001) with increased roughness and decreased gloss for CP and AW when compared to TABS. There was a statistically significant correlation between post-brushing roughness and post-brushing gloss (P< 0.001, rho: -0.815). Thus, the higher the surface roughness the lower the gloss.

Clinical significance: Toothpaste tablets retain better gloss and roughness of resin-based composite materials when compared to conventional toothpastes.

MeSH terms

  • Composite Resins
  • Dental Materials
  • Dental Polishing*
  • Materials Testing
  • Surface Properties
  • Toothbrushing
  • Toothpastes*

Substances

  • Toothpastes
  • Dental Materials
  • Composite Resins