T. Backman et Ma. Larmas, CHRONIC METABOLIC ALKALOSIS, SUCROSE DIET AND DENTIN FORMATION IN YOUNG-RATS, Archives of oral biology, 42(4), 1997, pp. 299-304
As acid-base status has an effect on bone formation and remodelling, c
hronic metabolic alkalosis was induced in 3-week-old rats for 6 and 7
weeks with 0.25 mol/l of NaHCO3 in their drinking water to determine w
hether it has any effect on dentinogenesis in the molars. One group of
rats was fed a high-sucrose diet and the other two a standard diet. T
he control groups had the same diets but drank distilled water. All th
e rats were injected with tetracycline to mark the onset of dentine ap
position. The alkalotic effect of the NaHCO3 drinking water was confir
med by blood gas analysis at the end of the experiment. After death, t
etracycline-marked dentine apposition was measured from sagittally sec
tioned mandibular molars. Chronic metabolic alkalosis did not affect d
entine apposition in the groups with the high-sucrose diet, nor in the
groups with the standard diet at 6 weeks, but reduced it significantl
y in first and second molars in 7 weeks at rats on the standard diet.
A high-sucrose diet alone caused a greater reduction in the amount of
dentine. The general growth of the rats was not affected in any of the
groups. (C) 1997 Elsevier Science Ltd.