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Chemical Composition of The Teeth

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Chemical Composition of The Teeth Hanadi Baeissa The outer surface of enamel frequently lacks the normal arrangement of rods (or prisms) but is arranged either in ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chemical Composition of The Teeth


1
Chemical Composition of The Teeth
2
The main dental tissues
  • Teeth are made of
  • Enamel Dentine Cementum
  • Enamel and dentine have different composition
  • Cementum and dentine are very similar in
    composition

3
The relations of the main dental tissues
4
Composition of dental tissues
  • Dental tissues are made of Organic matter
    minerals water
  • Different of constituents depending on
    calculation of proportions by weight or volume
  • Enamel contains very little organic matter (
    1.3 of dry weight or 1.1 of wet tissues, but
    3 of the actual volume) - gt 90 inorganic

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  • Dentine contains more organic matter ( 20 of
    dry weight, or 21 of wet tissues, but 28 of
    the actual volume), while the inorganic part is
    72 of wet weight, or 48 actual volume
  • Cementum is similar to dentine in composition

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8
Mineral composition
  • Most reliable analysis obtained by heating tissue
    to 105C to evaporate water prior to analysis
  • The most predominant mineral is calcium followed
    by phosphorus, and finally magnesium
  • Ca and P are more in enamel
  • Mg and CO2 are more in dentine

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The structure of the inorganic fraction
  • The main constituent is the crystalline form of
    calcium phosphate known as apatite with (except
    probably in enamel) some amorphous calcium
    phosphate

11
  1. Apatites are a crystalline form having the
    general formula Ca10 (Po4)6 X2, and the most
    widely distributed type is hydroxy apatite (HA)
    where x is OH
  2. Apatites belong to the hexagonal system of
    crystals

12
The crystal structure of hydroxyapatite
13
  • Calcium in the apatite structure (two types)
  • A- columnar calcium forms a series of hexagons
  • B- hexagonal calcium lie within the hexagons,
    and the ions are arranged in triangles placed
    parallel to each other with adjacent triangles
    rotated through 60C, so if viewed along the
    longitudinal axis, the calcium atoms in the two
    triangles would appear as a second hexagon

14
The crystal structure of hydroxyapatite
15
  • Phosphate in the apatite structure
  • phosphates are placed in two tetrahedra
    (each consisting of one phosphorus atom with four
    oxygen atoms) between pairs of calcium ions in
    the outer hexagon , so that one phosphorus and
    three oxygen atoms are above the plane of the
    calcium ions (the fourth oxygen atom being below
    the plane) and the other phosphate is arranged in
    the reverse way

16
The crystal structure of hydroxyapatite
17
  • The hydroxyl ions in the apatite structure
  • OH- are placed inside the triangles formed
    by the calcium ions.
  • The O is either slightly above, or an equal
    distance below the plane of the calcium
    triangles.
  • There is no room to accommodate two OH
    group pointing towards each other (-OH---
    ---HO-) in adjacent calcium triangles.

18
  • They must either be arranged in an ordered
    column i.e. (OH- OH- OH- .) along the axis or
    in disordered column with the direction
    reversed at various places.
  • The latter is supported by evidence, resulting
    in voids or vacancies where space prevents an OH
    group being placed

19
The crystal structure of hydroxyapatite
20
  • Fluoride in the apatite structure
  • Fluoride can enter the vacancies, so that
    it occupies a central position in the same plane
    as calcium ions
  • In addition, it can replace OH ions
  • The resulting crystal is more stable and
    less soluble than apatite without fluoride

21
  • Biological apatite are non-stoichiometric
  • Pure synthetic apatite has CaP ratio of 2.15
  • Ratio is lower in bone and teeth
  • Two properties of apatite explain the variation
    in nature

22
  • Adsorption
  • e.g. adsorption of excess phosphate as
    (HPO4-) on the crystal surface, and of citrate,
    CO32-, HCO3- and magnesium as (MgOH) as well
  • Ion exchange
  • e.g. substitution of Calcium by sodium and
    magnesium, or H3O for two adjacent calcium, or
    even absence of some calcium and the addition of
    one H to PO4 3 to give HPO42- and the absence
    of OH- to maintain electrical balance

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  • The more general formula for biologically formed
    apatite is Ca10-x (HPO4)x (PO4)6-x (OH) 2-x .XH2O
    (where x is between o and 2, and normally a
    fractional number)
  • Another likely component with apatite is Octa
    Calcium Phosphate (OCP)
  • Ca8 H2 (PO4)6 .5H2O
  • i.e. Ca8 (HPO4)2 (PO4)4.5H2O CaP1.33,
    thus explaining the lower CaP ratio in nature

25
The crystallinity of apatite
  • Biologically formed crystals are not perfect
  • Fluoride presence in environment during crystal
    formation improves crystallinity
  • Magnesium and carbonate inhibit crystal growth
    and lead to formation of crystals with poor
    crystallinity

26
The size, shape and orientation of crystals
  • The rods or prisms are the anatomical unit of
    enamel
  • They are 5µm in diameter and extending through
    its full thickness
  • They are shaped like a key hole with a round head
    or, in some places, a fish tail
  • The tails of one row fit between the heads of the
    next, so that the heads are towards the cusp.
  • Crystallites within rods are oriented in a
    cuspal-cervical direction in the tail end, but
    perpendicular to this direction in the head end

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  • Each row of prisms is inclined to its neighbors
    by 2
  • In the outer third the rows of prisms are
    parallel and roughly perpendicular to the enamel
    surface

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30
  • The outer surface of enamel frequently lacks the
    normal arrangement of rods (or prisms) but is
    arranged either in continuous layers parallel to
    the surface or as onion like curves
  • This prism-less layer is usually 20-30µm thick,
    and present in deciduous truths and 70 of
    permanent teeth, although it did not cover the
    whole of the surface in most teeth, probably
    because it was worn a way by abrasion
  • The apatite crystals in this layer are arranged
    almost at right angles to enamel surface in
    contrast to those within the prisms

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32
  • Note
  • These changes in direction produce the optical
    phenomenon known as the Hunter Schreger bands

33
  • The crystals in enamel are 10x larger than
    those of bone or dentine i.e. smaller surface
    area/unit weight

34
Minor inorganic constituents of enamel and
dentine
  1. Higher concentration on the surface of enamel
    than within (F, Pb, Zn, Fe, Sb, Mn, Cl, Se)
  2. Lower concentration on surface than within (Na,
    Mg, CO32-)
  3. Distribution approximately uniform (K, Sr, Cu, Al)

35
  • Concentrations range from a few ppm to lt0.01 ppm.
  • Only strontium, F and Zn reach or exceed conc.
    Of 100 ppm through out the teeth
  • Ions that attach readily to apatite crystals tend
    to increase in parts of teeth which are exposed
    mostly to body fluid i.e. outer enamel, outer
    cementum and inner dentine

36
  • Ions that dissolve out from crystals easily, will
    tend to decrease in the above parts
  • Sodium concentration of enamel is higher than
    that of any other tissue in the body
  • Magnesium rises in concentration from about 0.45
    in outer enamel to 2 in inner dentine

37
Factors affecting the composition of enamel and
dentine
  1. Position in tooth already discussed
  2. Type of tooth e.g. F on surface of enamel is
    higher in incisors than in molars-opposite for
    proteins
  3. Effect of age increase in F and Sr with age.
    Some may decrease or increase due to decreased
    permeability

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39
Organic Matter of Dentine
  • Collagen
  • Higher in the outer third
  • Contains chondroitin sulphate
  • OH-lysine higher than in skin
  • Is linked to a phospho protein through an oligo
    saccharide

40
  • Non collagen matrix
  • Approx. 20 components
  • 2 large molecules a glycoprotein containing
    sialic acid, and a proteoglycan containing CS.
    Both have phosphoserine
  • Serum albumin and immunoglobulins are also present

41
  • Lipids
  • Some is bound to, or trapped by, the mineral
    matter
  • F.a., MAG, DAG, lecithin and cardiolipin are not
    bound
  • Cholesterol, its esters and TAG are partially
    bound
  • Citrate

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43
Organic Matter of Enamel
  • A. Protein
  • Inner enamel
  • Larger
  • High in gly leu

Insoluble
Soluble
  • Outer and inner enamel
  • Consist of peptides of MW lt3500
  • High in ser, pro, and gly
  • Standing in acid becomes insoluble
  • Contains bound carbohydrates
  • (hexoses, fucose and xylolose)
  • High content leads to reduction in
  • spread of caries

44
  • B. Lipids similar to dentine. Give strong
    staining reaction in early caries due to release
    from minerals
  • C. Citrate higher on the surface and near the
    amelo-dentinal junction than in the middle
  • D. Lactate similar distribution, but lower
    concentration

45
The relations of the main dental tissues
46
10- Cementum
Primary (Cell-free)
Secondary (Cell-containing)
  • Contains cells Lacunae with
  • canaliculi is Lamellated also
  • Covers the apical two- thirds of
  • the root
  • A series of lamellae parallel to
  • direction of root
  • present on the coronal third of
  • the root

47
  • Both contain collagen fibers of the periodontal
    membrane embedded
  • Similar composition to dentine but lower ash
    content (Ca P)
  • Formed intermittently by cementoblasts, lying
    between the edge of the periodontal membrane, and
    a thin layer of uncalcified pre cementum
  • Continued formation through out life
  • Amount arrangement is influenced by occlusal
    stress
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