Influence of Aesthetic Archwire Coatings on Bacterial Adhesion
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
3. Database Search
- “aesthetic coated archwire & biofilm adhesion”
- “aesthetic orthodontic wire & biofilm adhesion”
- “aesthetic coated archwire & bacterial adhesion”
- “aesthetic orthodontic wire & bacterial adhesion”
- “orthodontic coatings & biofilm adhesion”
- “orthodontic coatings & bacterial adhesion”
- In vivo and in vitro studies;
- Studies concerning aesthetic archwire coatings;
- Studies concerning the influence of aesthetic coatings on bacterial adhesion;
- Studies in English;
- Full-text articles published from 15 March 1992 to 15 March 2022.
- Case reports;
- Case series;
- Review articles;
- Studies in a language other than English;
- Studies on animals;
- Studies on patients with systemic disease;
- Studies on patients with periodontal disease.
4. Quality Assessment—Risk of Bias (RoB)
5. Results
5.1. Risk of Bias (RoB) Assessment
5.2. The GRADE Analysis
5.3. Discussion of Outcomes
5.3.1. Epoxy Resin Coating
5.3.2. Rhodium Coating
5.3.3. Teflon Coating
5.3.4. Biopolymer and Silver Coating
5.3.5. 24K Gold Coating
6. Discussion
Limitations of the Study
- Only one study addressed the influence of aesthetic steel archwire coatings. Other studies focused on the aesthetic coatings of NiTi archwires [20].
- The articles lacked a homogeneous research method. Differences included how the study material was obtained, how long patients used orthodontic archwires in the in vivo study, and how the incubation period was for bacteria collected from the orthodontic archwires studied.
- The authors of the analyzed studies used different methods to analyze the results. In addition, some of the analyzes lacked p-values, making it impossible for the review authors to perform a meta-analysis.
- In the GRADE analysis, due to the lack of available other reviews and meta-analyses concerning the hypothesis under investigation, the authors had to develop a way to assess inconsistency by themselves. This method was based on a comparison of the results of studies concerning a given coating among the articles included in the review. If the result of an analysed article was confirmed in other articles, then the article received an inconsistency score of “not serious” The greater the inconsistency of results in analysed articles, the worse the incosistency score for a given article (“serious” or “very serious”). When a study tested several types of coatings and inconsistency scores for each type were different (e.g., “serious” for epoxy resin coating and “very serious” for rhodium coating), then the final score for that article was considered the worse inconsistency score.
- Due to different scoring gradations in the RoB assesment (grades: low, moderate, serious) and the GRADE analysis (grades: not serious, serious, very serious), the following modifications were adopted: low RoB, not serious RoB in the GRADE analysis; moderate RoB, serious RoB in the GRADE analysis; serious RoB, very serious RoB in the GRADE analysis.
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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- | Costa Lima et al. | Hasipek et al. | |
---|---|---|---|
1. | Was true randomization used to assign participants to treatment groups? | Yes | Yes |
2. | Was the allocation to groups concealed? | Yes | Yes |
3. | Were treatment groups similar at baseline? | Yes | Yes |
4. | Were participants blind to treatment assignment? | Yes | Yes |
5. | Were those delivering treatment blind to treatment assignment? | Yes | No |
6. | Were outcome assessors blind to treatment assignment? | Unclear | Unclear |
7. | Were treatment groups treated identically other than the intervention of interest? | Yes | Yes |
8. | Was the follow-up complete and, if not, were the differences between groups in terms of their follow-up adequately described and analysed? | Yes | Yes |
9. | Were the participants analysed in the groups to which they were randomly assigned? | Yes | Yes |
10. | Were outcomes measured in the same way for the treatment groups? | Yes | Yes |
11. | Were the results measured in a reliable way? | Yes | Yes |
12. | Was appropriate statistical analysis used? | No | No |
13. | Was the trial design appropriate for the topic and were any deviations from the standard RCT design accounted for in the conduct and analysis? | Unclear | Unclear |
Possible answers: Yes/No/Unclear/Not applicable |
- | Raji et al. | |
---|---|---|
1. | Bias due to confounding | Serious |
2. | Bias in the selection of participants into the study | Low |
3. | Bias in the classification of interventions | Moderate |
4. | Bias due to deviations from intended interventions | Low |
5. | Bias due to missing data | No info |
6. | Bias in the measurement of outcomes | Moderate |
7. | Bias in the selection of the reported result | Moderate |
Overall bias | Serious |
- | Kim et al. | Oliveira et al. | Asiry et al. | Al-Sheakli et al. | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. | Sample size/quantity (more than 8 samples of each wire) | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
2. | Sample randomization | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
3. | Control group (uncoated wire) | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
4. | Blinding of the outcome assessor | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
5. | Sample sterilization before use | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
6. | Results measured in a reliable way | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
7. | Appropriate statistical analysis | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
Overall risk of bias (RoB) | Moderate | Moderate | Moderate | Low |
Title of the Publication, Authors | Study Design | Risk of Bias (RoB) | Inconsistency | Indirectness | Imprecision | Comments | Certainty |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
“Comparative analysis of microorganism adhesion on coated, partially coated, and uncoated orthodontic archwires: A prospective clinical study” Costa Lima et al., 2019 | In vivo study (randomized clinical trial) | Serious | Serious ** | Not serious | Not serious | Low | |
“An Examination of Bacterial Colonisation on Nickel-Titanium Arch-wires with Different Surface Properties” Hasipek et al., 2019 | In vivo study (randomized clinical trial) | Serious | Serious ** | Not serious | Not serious | Low | |
“Bacterial colonisation on coated and uncoated orthodontic wires: A prospective clinical trial” Raji et al., 2014 | In vivo study (controlled clinical trial) | Very serious | Serious ** | Not serious | Not serious | Very low |
Title of the Publication, Authors | Study Design | Risk of Bias (RoB) | Inconsistency | Indirectness | Imprecision | Comments | Certainty |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
“Comparative short-term in vitro analysis of mutans streptococci adhesion on esthetic, nickel-titanium, and stainless-steel arch wires” Kim et al., 2013 | In vitro study | Serious | Serious ** | Serious * | Not serious | Low | |
“In vitro Streptococcus mutans adhesion and biofilm formation on different esthetic orthodontic archwires.” Oliveira et al., 2021 | In vitro study | Serious | Very serious ** | Serious * | Serious | Small study group; significant inconsistency of results with other available studies | Very low |
“Influence of epoxy, polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) and rhodium surface coatings on surface roughness, nano-mechanical properties and biofilm adhesion of nickel titanium (Ni-Ti) archwires” Asiry et al., 2018 | In vitro study | Serious | Very serious ** | Serious * | Serious | Small study group; significant inconsistency of results with other available studies | Very low |
“Quantitative assessment of Mutans Streptococci adhesion to coated and uncoated orthodontic archwires (in vitro study)” Al-Sheakli et al., 2014 | In vitro study | Not serious | Serious ** | Serious * | Not serious | Low |
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Słonik, K.; Mikulewicz, M.; Sarul, M. Influence of Aesthetic Archwire Coatings on Bacterial Adhesion. Coatings 2022, 12, 1120. https://doi.org/10.3390/coatings12081120
Słonik K, Mikulewicz M, Sarul M. Influence of Aesthetic Archwire Coatings on Bacterial Adhesion. Coatings. 2022; 12(8):1120. https://doi.org/10.3390/coatings12081120
Chicago/Turabian StyleSłonik, Krzysztof, Marcin Mikulewicz, and Michał Sarul. 2022. "Influence of Aesthetic Archwire Coatings on Bacterial Adhesion" Coatings 12, no. 8: 1120. https://doi.org/10.3390/coatings12081120
APA StyleSłonik, K., Mikulewicz, M., & Sarul, M. (2022). Influence of Aesthetic Archwire Coatings on Bacterial Adhesion. Coatings, 12(8), 1120. https://doi.org/10.3390/coatings12081120