Amoxicillin is an antibiotic widely prescribed; its most frequent side effects are gastrointestinal disorders and
hypersensitivity reactions. Over the last 10 years studies have been published which suggest that amoxicillin may
cause dental alterations similar to dental fluorosis. Never the less, the results are not conclusive, this is why it was
planned the need to make controlled studies on test animals.
Objectives: The purpose of this study was to determine the effect produced by amoxicillin prenatal administration
on dental enamel in Wistar rats.
Study Design: 12 pregnant adult rats were used distributed into five different groups: witness control (n=2) didn't
get any treatment; negative control (n=2) they were prescribed with saline solution; positive control (n=3) they
were prescribed with tetracycline 130 mg/kg, and two groups (n=3 and n=2) treated with amoxicillin doses of 50
and 100 mg/kg respectively. The treatments were daily administered by mouth, from the 6th gestation day to the
end of gestation. Twenty five days after they were born, the offspring were sacrificed with a sodium pentobarbital
overdose, the mandible was dissected and the first lower molars were gotten. The samples were fixed in 10% formaldehyde
solution and clinically and histologically observed to determine any enamel disorders.
Results: hypomineralization was observed in every single sample of the tetracyclic and amoxicillin treated group
100 mg/kg, meanwhile only 50% from the group administered with 50 mg/kg amoxicillin showed this histological
disorder.
Conclusions: the side effect caused by amoxicillin on dental enamel was doses dependent
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