Evaluate the effectiveness and color stability of bleaching techniques on blood-stained teeth.
Material and MethodsThe teeth were stained by blood and allocated to groups: walking bleach, inside/outside, and in-office bleaching. L*, a*, b*, C*, h° color coordinates were measured using a clinical spectrophotometer at baseline, weekly (T1-T2-T3), and at 1-week (T4), 6-months (T5), and 1-year (T6) follow-up evaluations. , , and were calculated between sequential evaluation timepoints and between baseline and each evaluation timepoint. Color coordinates and WID differences in each timepoint and technique were analyzed by Wilcoxon Signed Rank, Kruskal-Wallis and Mann–Whitney U test, respectively. , , and were interpreted by color visual thresholds.
ResultsThe techniques presented a significant increase in L* and WID and, a significant decrease in a* and b* until the completion of treatments. Statistical differences between the techniques for a*, b* and WID were observed from T1 until T3. All techniques demonstrated excellent effectiveness for , , and between baseline and each evaluation and follow-up timepoints. However, at T6, it was possible to identify a rebound effect for all techniques.
ConclusionsAll bleaching techniques presented excellent effectiveness. The stability of the whitening produced was maintained for 6 months.
Clinical SignificanceEffective whitening of blood-stained teeth was achieved using walking bleach (sodium perborate), inside/outside (hydrogen peroxide - 7.5%) and in-office techniques (hydrogen peroxide - 35%). The bleaching techniques were effective after the completion of the treatments. A slight rebound was observed at 1 year follow-up.
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