INTRODUCTION
Hydroxyapatite (HA), Ca5(PO4)3(OH), is an inorganic calcium phosphate compound present in nature including the human body [1] [2]. Synthetic hydroxyapatite is a biomaterial because it is biocompatible with human tissues and has bioactive properties. Therefore, Nayak [3] says that “it is widely used in various biomedical applications, mainly in orthopedics and dentistry” (p903).
Incorporating dopants into minerals can greatly modify the mineral characteristics related to the crystallization degree or improvement of stability [4]. Adding fluorine to HA produces fluorohydroxyapatite, which is more chemically stable and has a lower solubility than HA alone [5]. HA´s cation exchange rate is very high with heavy metals or ions like Pb2+, Ca2+, Cu2+, Mn2+, Co2+ and Ag+ among others [6]. Metallic or ionic silver compounds have been used in a wide variety of products due to their antibacterial activity (including bacteria, viruses and fungi) [4] [7] [8]. According to Kolmas et al. [9], silver has “strong antibacterial properties of an exceptionally broad spectrum” (p3-4).
At low concentrations, silver cations are microcidal and can be used to treat burns, wounds, ulcers or as coatings of medical devices or implants because it delays the microbial biofilm development [10]. It is important to calculate the silver content in doped hydroxyapatite based materials, according to Kolmas et al. [9] “since it should be high enough to be able to effectively fight microorganism, while at the same time it should also be limited in order that it does not adversely affect the condition of mammalian tissues” (p5). The antimicrobial effect of silver nanostructures material systems occurs in different ways in the microbial cell, such as damage to the cell membrane by destabilization and cell lysis, damage to the subcellular microbial structure, caused by free Ag+ ions and generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) or inactivation of proteins, enzymes and nucleotides, as well as the modification of microbial signal transduction pathways [11] [12]. The antibacterial effects of silver compounds shows less toxicity in human cells by altering metabolic pathways unique to bacteria and inducing apoptosis dependent on particle size [13].
Among all the methods or techniques used to prepare HA, combustion has its advantages because it produces nanocrystalline powders with specific characteristics depending on the combustion heat and gas evolution [4].
According to Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI) standards for antimicrobial susceptibility test, there are several ways for determining bactericidal activity of antimicrobial agents such a disk diffusion, broth dilution and agar dilution that measures the inhibitory activity (MIC) of an antimicrobial agent [14] [15]. For routine determinations, the microdilution method is preferred.
Enterocuccus faecalis (E. faecalis) is a microbial indicator of peri-implantitis and endodontic failure, since the bacteria has been found in the tooth root and the surrounding tissue after implant placement [16] [17]. Confocal microscopy studies have demonstrated its persistence in the periapical spaces and the root cementum [18].
The aim of the present study is to investigate the antibacterial activity of hydroxyapatite and hydroxyapatite based materials doped with silver and fluorine against E. faecalis since it is the most prominent microorganism involved in persistent infections after root canal therapy [18].
MATERIALS AND METHODS
a) Hydroxyapatite based material preparation
In order to prepare the hydroxyapatite based materials with and without silver and fluorine, calcium nitrate (Ca(NO3)2), ammonium phosphate dibasic ((NH4)2HPO4), silver trifluoroacetate (CaF3O2Ag), calcium fluoride (CaF2) and silver nitrate (AgNO3) were used as precursors. Urea (CO(NH2)2) was used as fuel.
Four different hydroxyapatite materials were formulated: hydroxyapatite (HA), hydroxyapatite with fluorine (HA-F), hydroxyapatite with silver and fluorine (HA-Ag-F), and hydroxyapatite with silver (HA-Ag). The synthesis of 5 grams of all four HA materials was performed using the combustion method. For all the formulations a 1.67 ratio of Ca/P was used, as for the HA-F, HA-Ag-F and HA-Ag formulations, 2% of the doping agents were used. Every formulation received two thermal treatments, the first one up to 600°C/240 min with a heating speed of 5°C/min, and the second one up to 900°C/240 min at same conditions.
b) Characterization
The powder samples obtained were characterized by the X-ray powder diffraction (XDR) method (Bruker X-ray Diffraction D8 Advance diffractometer) with Cu K α1. Data were collected over θ range of 10-70°. The final materials’ surface was observed by using scanning electron microscopy (SEM) (JEOL JSM 7600F microscope).
c) Antibacterial evaluation
The materials’ antibacterial effects were tested against ATCC reference and clinical microbial strains (E. faecalis ATCC 29212). First, a modified inhibition test zone (Kirby-Bauer Test) was performed to observe if the bacteria were susceptible to the antimicrobial agent by the dimension of the inhibition zone on the agar plate. E. faecalis ATCC 29212 was grown in pure culture. Using a sterile swab, a suspension of the axenic culture was spread evenly over the surface of a MuellerHinton agar plate. Instead of using a paper disk as indicated in the CLSI guide, each material was applied to the center of a different agar plate. After 24 hours of incubation at 37°C, the plates were observed to see the inhibition around the test product. A control plate was also performed.
The broth microdilution method (Muller-Hinton broth) was used to determine the minimum inhibitory concentration. Dilutions of the materials were prepared freshly for each experiment. Microbial suspensions of 5 x 105 colony-forming unit (CFU)/ml obtained from 18 to 20 hours bacterial cultures developed on solid media were used.
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
a) Characterization
All materials obtained were homogeneous powders. The mineralogical XDR analysis of the materials identified hydroxyapatite as a primary phase and various structures and other types of phosphates. Table 1 shows the crystalline phases present in the studied samples and their respective XDR identification card, obtained by XDR.
Formulation | Crystalline phases | XDR card |
---|---|---|
HA |
Ca5(PO4)3OH α-Ca2P2O7 β-Ca2P2O7 |
00 009 0432 00 009 0345 00 020 0024 |
HA-F |
α Ca2P2O7 Ca5(PO4)3F CaF2 |
00 009 0345 00 015 0876 00 004 0864 |
HA-Ag-F |
β-Ca2P2O7 Ag3PO4 |
00 020 0024 01 089 7399 |
HA-Ag |
Ca5(PO4) Ag3PO4 Ag4P2O7 Ag AgCa10(PO4)7 |
00 009 0432 01 089 7399 00 037 0187 01 089 3722 00 054 1098 |
The XDR patterns of the hydroxyapatite based materials are shown in Figures 1 to 4. All figures present two diffraction patterns, because two different thermal treatments were applied, one at 600°C and the other at 900°C. Different heat treatments were applied in order to evaluate the thermal effect on the crystallization phase. All XDR diffraction patterns were obtained from the different materials’ powder.
The heat-treated samples at 900°C, show patterns that have better definition, in terms of crystallization.
Figure 1 shows the hydroxyapatite formulation XRD patterns, that closely matches the regular hydroxyapatite pattern. It shows the presence of Ca5(PO4)3OH as main phase; also α-Ca2P2O7, and β-Ca2P2O7 as secondary phases. Figure 2 shows the hydroxyapatite fluorine material diffraction patterns, where fluorapatite (Ca5(PO4)3F) is the main phase, and α-Ca2P2O7 and CaF2 are secondary phases.
Figure 3 shows the hydroxyapatite with silver and fluorine material diffraction patterns. As can be observed, the peaks correspond to Ag3PO4 and β-Ca2P2O7, the CaF2 peaks are very weak at 2Ɵ ~29°. Figure 4 shows the hydroxyapatite silver diffraction patterns in which Ag, Ag3PO4, Ag4PO7 and AgCa10(PO4)7 are present. This material is the one with the highest number of crystalline phases.
Figures 5 to 8 show the scanning electron microscopy (SEM) images of the hydroxyapatite based materials surface structures with and without silver and/or fluorine at 900°C, by microanalysis of secondary electrons of energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDS).
A homogeneous crystallization is observed for the HA based material with and without silver and/or fluorine. The brighter zones correspond to silver and fluorine [4]. The grain size of each material happens to be in the nanometric scale.
Figure 5 shows the surface analysis of HA material in which a matrix formed mainly by grains composed of Ca, P and O, can be observed. Figure 6 shows the surface of the HA-F material in which two zones can be observed, one containing crystals (Ca, P, O, and F) and the other with circular shaped particles (Ca, P, and O).
The HA-Ag-F material has two defined areas, a crystalline one, composed of Ca, P, O and F, and a second interface, between the grain boundaries, composed of Ag, P and O (Figure 7). Figure 8 shows the surface of the HA-Ag material in which it is possible to observe a predominant homogeneous crystallization phase (Ca, P and O), and a clearly identifiable secondary phase (Ag, P and O).
b) Antibacterial activity evaluation
After 48 hours of incubation, the modified inhibition test zone showed that HA and HA-F materials did not present antibacterial activity due to the absence of the inhibition zone. Both HA-Ag-F and HA-Ag materials generated an inhibition zone; demonstrating their antibacterial activity. HA-Ag material showed a bigger inhibition zone in comparison to HA-Ag-F. Figure 9 shows the inhibition zones formed by the materials after 48 hours of incubation. After seven days, the HA-Ag inhibition zone grew more than the HA-Ag-F, whereas HA and HA-F did not develop an inhibition zone. Figure 10 shows the inhibition zones maintained after seven days.
The minimum inhibitory concentration for the silver-doped hydroxyapatite (HA-Ag) material needed to kill most of the viable organism (E. faecalis) after 24 hours of incubation was 75 µg/ml, and 200 µg/ml for the silver and fluorine-doped hydroxyapatite (HA-Ag-F) respectively. Figure 11 shows the microdilution trays for the HA-Ag formulation and Figure 12 shows the results for the HA-Ag-F formulation.
CONCLUSIONS
The aim of this investigation was to evaluate the antibacterial activity of nanostructured hydroxyapatite based materials doped with silver and/or fluorine. It was demonstrated that the hydroxyapatite and hydroxyapatite with fluorine formulations did not form an inhibition zone due to its lack of antibacterial properties, as it was expected because neither of these formulations contained antibacterial dopant agents. It was demonstrated that the hydroxyapatite with silver and the hydroxyapatite with silver and fluorine formulations have antibacterial properties; they inhibited the E. faecalis bacteria’s growth. The minimum inhibitory concentration of the hydroxyapatite with silver formulation needed to kill most viable organism after 24 hours of incubation was 75 μg/ml, and 200 μg/ml for the silver and fluorine-doped hydroxyapatite formulation. It is recommended to perform more tests to determine if the materials have a bacteriostatic or bactericidal effect.
The hydroxyapatite with silver formulation had the highest antibacterial activity when compared to the silver and fluorine-doped hydroxyapatite formulation, possibly due to the lower amount of silver contained in this last formulation. This is why, new formulations are recommended, where the amount of silver is higher, all the while maintaining the presence of fluorine in the hydroxyapatite matrix since its presence lower the hydroxyapatite solubility and therefore its deionization, which in turn allows the tooth to not demineralize.
HA-Ag formulation shows activity in E. faecalis and a potential use in the treatment for root canals or in other dental applications due to its antibacterial activity.
According to the available literature, these materials could be used to develop new biomaterials that in effect can be use in the health field, particularly in dentistry.