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In vitro new dialysis protocol to assay the antiseptic properties of a quaternary ammonium compound polymerized with denture acrylic resin
Author(s) -
PesciBardon C.,
Fosse T.,
Madinier I.,
Serre D.
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
letters in applied microbiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.698
H-Index - 110
eISSN - 1472-765X
pISSN - 0266-8254
DOI - 10.1111/j.1472-765x.2004.01569.x
Subject(s) - nice , medicine , computer science , programming language
Aims:  To develop an in vitro protocol in order to assess the antiseptic properties of a quaternary ammonium compound polymerized with acrylic denture resin base, using experimental resin discs and dialysis membranes. Methods and Results:  Experimental acrylic resin discs were polymerized with Poly 202063A, an ammonium compound (2–50%). Antiseptic properties were assayed against two reference strains ( Escherichia coli , Staphylococcus aureus ) and a laboratory strain ( Candida albicans ), using three different conditions (test A, B and C). In test A, according to classical protocols the resin discs were first soaked in large volumes of microbial inoculum (45 ml). An original dialysis protocol was then designed to recreate the small biofilm volume on the prosthetic surface. In test B, discs and bacterial inoculum (600  μ l) were introduced in a dialysis bag and dialysed against a sterile buffer. A bactericidal effect was observed against E. coli and Staph. aureus (<0·1% viable cells in initial bacterial suspension). A dose‐dependent fungistatic effect was observed against C. albicans . Finally, in test C discs and sterile buffer (600  μ l) were introduced in a dialysis bag and dialysed against microbial inoculum. Reduced activity was found outside the dialysis bag, demonstrating that free ammonium was able to diffuse through the dialysis membrane, displaying antiseptic properties. Conclusions:  The present protocol demonstrated that a quaternary ammonium compound remains efficient after heat polymerization with an acrylic denture base resin, both in immediate and distant microbial environments. Significance and Impact of the Study:  Such removable prosthetic devices with intrinsic antiseptic properties would contribute to improve the long‐term management of denture stomatitis.

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