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1.
Heliyon ; 10(14): e34180, 2024 Jul 30.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39114082

RESUMO

This study evaluates the mechanical properties and formulation of dental restoration material comprised of cellulose acetate (CA) from water hyacinth and chitosan (C) from white shrimp shells. The research phases included extraction, formulation, functional group testing, antibacterial, toxicity, water absorption and solubility, compressive, shear, tensile, hardness, microleakage, thermal expansion, and shrinkage. The experimental data were analyzed using probit regression, one-way ANOVA, and Kruskal-Wallis test. The data showed that CA and C had microxyl and amine groups, could inhibit S. mutans, and were non-toxic. Composite resins were divided into nine formulations with different concentrations: F1 (1 % CA + 3 % C), F2 (1 % CA + 5 % C), F3 (1 % CA + 7 % C), F4 (3 % CA + 3 % C), F5 (3 % CA + 5 % C), F6 (3 % CA + 7 % C), F7 (5 % CA + 3 % C), F8 (5 % CA + 5 % C), and F9 (5 % CA + 7 % C). The F9 has mechanical strength close to the control group, with 113.33 µg/mm3 absorption, 80 µg/mm3 solubility, 32.67 Mpa compressive strength, 17.18 Mpa tensile strength, and no shrinkage. It shows that F9 has potential as an eco-friendly dental filling material. The present study completed the development of a formulation for a restoration material by combining water hyacinth fiber and shrimp skin chitosan. The outcomes of a comparative analysis of the mechanical properties of synthetic composite resins and water hyacinth fiber composites containing shrimp skin chitosan revealed that the F9 formulation (CA 5 % + C 7 %) exhibited the following fiber: absorption, compressive strength, tensile strength, hardness, and thermal expansion.

2.
J Stomatol Oral Maxillofac Surg ; 125(6): 101766, 2024 Jan 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38286219

RESUMO

INTRODUCTION: Indonesia is a multicultural Asian country with a high incidence of cleft. This study contextualizes how patients' sociocultural backgrounds hinder cleft management in a diverse nation. MATERIAL AND METHODS: This study involved 202 families of cleft patients attending six tertiary care hospitals in South Sulawesi between 2021 and 2022. A mixed-methods, descriptive cross-sectional study employed semi-structured interviews and focus group discussions. Thematic content analysis was done using Murdock's causal attribution of illness. Knowledge of the treatments and surgery expectations used open coding. We held medical team focus group discussions to validate education on treatments. Cleft management education was thematically analyzed based on Indonesia's Minister of Health Decree. RESULTS: Two hundred-two families and ten medical teams participated. Thematic content analysis revealed common beliefs and factors that hinder medical treatments. The participants were 109 Buginese, 57 Makassarese, 16 Durinese, 8 Luwunese, 8 Torajanese, and 4 Mandarese. 22.3 % were unaware of causation, while 29.2 % attributed it to natural causes. About half of the interviewees believed in supernatural attribution. Even though 40 % of participants knew little about the surgery, they agreed that surgery improves appearance and speech. Medical treatments are delayed due to a lack of treatment knowledge, parents' concerns about surgical safety, and beliefs about causes. DISCUSSION: Indigenous societies in South Sulawesi believe in supernatural causes of cleft. Most had incomplete surgical treatment information. An intensive educational health program about causes, treatments, medical specialists, and treatment goals is warranted to enhance patient compliance with medical treatment, ultimately leading to improved health outcomes.

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