Measuring the activity of oral-bacteria in plaque, the sticky biofilm on enamel, can provide the presently lacking oral feedback to patients. We have developed O-pH, optical pH monitor that measures pH in the range of 4-7.5 and tested in vivo on 25 pediatric subjects (10-18 years) with high caries risk, 18 of these subjects had a dental cleaning within last two months and 7 didn’t have a cleaning in over 2 months. The average pH after a sugar rinse from regions of biofilm associated with caries was 5.8 and 0.5 units lower than the biofilm of sound enamel.
We have developed a new tool to measure the acid production by plaque oral bacteria. Many species of oral bacteria metabolize sugars in food and produce organic acids that demineralize the dental enamel leading to the formation of cavities. Measuring the acidity level before and after a sugar rinse can indicate the susceptibility of an individual to tooth decay and location of active caries. In a case study on two subjects, a non-contact optics-based pH device was able to track pH before and after a sugar rinse. The fiber optic probe measures acidity level in difficult to access dental locations such as occlusal pits and fissures based on changes in the spectral fluorescence profile of fluorescein (FL) dye.
Fiber coupled 420 nm LED excites 200uM aqueous FL solution in the mouth. The fluorescence spectrum in 450-650 nm range is obtained using an adjacent fiber optic cable coupled to a spectrometer. Chemometric analysis of endmember dianion and anion species using least-square fitting is performed to determine the pH of the FL absorbed into the extracellular region of the oral biofilm. Other unwanted noise, like background light and auto-fluorescence in the range of 450-650 nm is removed before calculating biofilm pH.
Using this device in a darkened room on two subjects, we were able to measure resting pH (before a sugar rinse) and track time dependent change in pH (after a sugar rinse) in the range of pH 4-7 paving the way for first clinical optical pH measurement in the mouth.
Sugar-rich diets and poor dental hygiene promote the formation of a biofilm (plaque) that strongly adheres to the dental enamel surface and fosters the evolution of aciduric bacteria. The acid contributes to demineralization of the exterior tooth enamel, which accelerates after the pH drops below a critical value (∼5.5) for extended time periods resulting in the need for restorative procedures. Preventative techniques to alert the dentist and caries-susceptible patients regarding vulnerability to dental decay require a clinical measure of plaque activity. Therefore, there is a need to evaluate the acid production capability of plaque deposits in the pits and fissures of occlusal and interproximal regions. A ratiometric fluorescence pH-sensing device has been developed using an FDA-approved dye and LED excitation. Fluorescein spectral profiles were collected using a spectrometer and analyzed with a spectral unmixing algorithm for calibration over the pH range of 4.5 to 7. An in vivo pilot study on human subjects was performed using a sucrose rinse to accelerate bacterial metabolism and to measure the time-dependent drop in pH. The optical system is relatively immune to confounding factors such as photobleaching, dye concentration, and variation in excitation intensity associated with earlier dye-based pH measurement techniques.
Access to the requested content is limited to institutions that have purchased or subscribe to SPIE eBooks.
You are receiving this notice because your organization may not have SPIE eBooks access.*
*Shibboleth/Open Athens users─please
sign in
to access your institution's subscriptions.
To obtain this item, you may purchase the complete book in print or electronic format on
SPIE.org.
INSTITUTIONAL Select your institution to access the SPIE Digital Library.
PERSONAL Sign in with your SPIE account to access your personal subscriptions or to use specific features such as save to my library, sign up for alerts, save searches, etc.