Oxidative stress aspects of the cytotoxicity of carbamide peroxide: in vitro studies.
Carbamide peroxide is the active ingredient in many at-home patient-applied tooth whiteners. The cytotoxicity of carbamide peroxide, as related to oxidative stress, was evaluated in vitro with several human cell lines, including Smulow-Glickman (S-G) gingival epithelial cells. The potency of carbamide peroxide was related to its hydrogen peroxide component rather than to carbamide, was eliminated in the presence of exogenous catalase, and was enhanced in the presence of aminotriazole, an inhibitor of cellular catalase. The intracellular level of glutathione, a scavanger of toxic oxygen metabolites, was decreased in cells exposed to carbamide peroxide; at higher concentrations of carbamide peroxide, leakage of lactic acid dehydrogenase was also evident. Cells pretreated with the glutathione-depleting agents, buthionine sulfoximine, chlorodinitrobenzene, and bis(chloroethyl) nitrosourea, were hypersensitive to subsequent challenge with carbamide peroxide. Conversely, pretreatment with the iron chelator, deferoxamine, protected the cells against subsequent exposure to carbamide peroxide.[1]References
- Oxidative stress aspects of the cytotoxicity of carbamide peroxide: in vitro studies. Sinensky, M.C., Leiser, A.L., Babich, H. Toxicol. Lett. (1995) [Pubmed]
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