scholarly journals Evaluation of Apical Transportation by Three Rotary Systems in Extracted Teeth with Curved Canals

Author(s):  
Ana Laura Ortiz-Rocha DDS, MS ◽  
Claudia Dávila-Pérez DDS, PhD ◽  
Marlen Vitales-Noyola MS, PhD ◽  
Verónica Méndez-González DDS, MS ◽  
Ana María González-Amaro MS ◽  
...  

The aim of this study was to compare the apical transportation in extracted teeth using three different rotary nickel-titanium systems (Mtwo, Hyflex CM, and Typhoon). Sixty extracted first molars were randomly divided into three groups (n=20 in each group) with similar root canal curvatures (25-52 degrees). All root canals were prepared to size 30 using a crown-down preparation technique for each rotary system. Loss of working length and apical transportation were determined by X-ray evaluation. Comparisons between the groups were performed using one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) or Kruskal-Wallis tests, and the post hoc analyses employed were Dunn´s or Tukey´s multiple comparison tests. No significant differences were detected between the different rotary systems in the loss of working length and apical transportation. This in vitro study showed that the use of these three rotary systems are safe and useful for instrumentation in curved canals; however, further in vivo research is essential to compare the effectiveness and safety of these systems for use in curved canals.

2016 ◽  
Vol 21 (3) ◽  
pp. 46-55 ◽  
Author(s):  
Camila Ivini Viana Vieira ◽  
Sergei Godeiro Fernandes Rabelo Caldas ◽  
Lídia Parsekian Martins ◽  
Renato Parsekian Martins

abstract Objective: This paper analyzed whether nickel-titanium closed coil springs (NTCCS) have a different superelastic (SE) behavior according to activation and whether their force plateau corresponds to that informed by the manufacturer. Methods: A total of 160 springs were divided into 16 subgroups according to their features and activated proportionally to the length of the extensible part (NiTi) of the spring (Y). The force values measured were analyzed to determine SE rates and force plateaus, which were mathematically calculated. These plateaus were compared to those informed by the manufacturer. Analysis of variance was accomplished followed by Tukey post-hoc test to detect and analyze differences between groups. Results: All subgroups were SE at the activation of 400% of Y length, except for: subgroups 4B and 3A, which were SE at 300%; subgroups 4E and 4G, which were SE at 500%; and subgroup 3C, which was SE at 600%. Subgroup 3B did not show a SE behavior. Force plateaus depended on activation and, in some subgroups and some activations, were similar to the force informed. Conclusions: Most of the springs showed SE behavior at 400% of activation. Force plateaus are difficult to compare due to lack of information provided by manufacturers.


2016 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Fernanda Diederichs Coutinho ◽  
Renata Dornelles Morgental ◽  
Simone Bonato Luisi ◽  
Fabiana Vieira Vier-Pelisser ◽  
Patricia Maria Poli Kopper

Objective: This study evaluated through stereomicroscopy the effectiveness of hand and rotary instrumentation techniques, either isolated or combined, in the preparation of oval-shaped root canals. Materials and method: Thirty single-rooted human mandibular incisors were selected. After endodontic access and coronal preflaring, teeth were mounted in a modified Bramante muffle and then sectioned transversely at 3 and 6 mm from the root apex. Images of each section were made under a stereomicroscope at 30× magnification. Teeth were reassembled in the muffle and divided into three groups (n=10) according to the root canal preparation technique: GI - rotary preparation with Mtwo™ basic sequence (10/.04; 15/.05; 20/.06; 25/.06), followed by Mtwo™ complementary instruments (30/.05; 35/.04; 40/.04); GII - rotary preparation with Mtwo™ basic sequence, complemented by hand instruments (#30, #35 and #40); GIII - hand instrumentation using the conventional technique (#10 to #40). All instruments were used in brushing motion. The muffles were separated again so that new images of each section could be obtained. The following parameters were evaluated in pre- and postoperative images: root canal area; perimeter; mesiodistal (MD) and buccolingual (BL) diameters; and mesial (M) and distal (D) wall thickness. Next, the values measured in post- and preoperative images were subtracted forcomparison of experimental groups. Data were analyzed using the Kruskal-Wallis test (α=0.05). Results: No significant difference between groups was observed for all parameters. Conclusion: There was no difference among hand, rotary, or combined instrumentation; all techniques were able to increase root canal area, perimeter, and diameter in MD and BL directions. Moreover, the amount of dentin wearon proximal root canal walls was similar for all tested groups.


Author(s):  
Bogdan R. SHUMILOVICH ◽  
Stanislav V. MIKLYAEV

Abstract. The purpose of this in vitro study was to compare the degree of root channel transport and the level of centering of the three most practical endodontic nickel-titanium rotary systems HyFlex EDM, Protaper NEXT and M-two using conical beam computed tomography data. In total, we selected 45 removed from periodontological indications of the first upper jaw molars with fully formed apical sections for the study. A prerequisite for the study was the presence of МВ1 and МВ2 in the anterior buccal root. We randomized all teeth into 3 groups (n = 15) and prepared samples using the files HyFlex EDM, Protaper NEXT and M-two. We evaluated the centering capacity and volume of channel transport by comparing preoperative and postoperative micro-CT scans. We used ANOVA tests, the classification trees method, and the forecast deviation calculation for statistical analysis. The significance level was at 0.05. The channels prepared by means of HyFlex EDM showed the minimum values of extent of transportation of root canals at all three levels (3, 5 and 7 mm from an apical konstriktion) that it connects with a unique design of cross section of a working part of the tool. Maximum channel transport was with M-two in the coronary (7 mm) and middle (5 mm) third. When analyzing centering abilities, channels prepared using the HyFlex EDM and Protaper NEXT system showed maximum values at all three levels compared to M-two files. The channels prepared by means of HyFlex EDM had the minimum values of transportation of the channel at all three levels of a root canal. Optimal mechanical preparation of root channels for the parameters studied at all levels was achieved using the tools HyFlex EDM and Protaper NEXT.


2007 ◽  
Vol 18 (4) ◽  
pp. 289-293 ◽  
Author(s):  
Orlando Limongi ◽  
Diana Santana de Albuquerque ◽  
Flares Baratto Filho ◽  
José Roberto Vanni ◽  
Elias P. Motcy de Oliveira ◽  
...  

This in vitro study compared, using computed tomography (CT), the amount of dentin removed from root canal walls by manual and mechanical rotary instrumentation techniques. Forty mandibular incisors with dental crown and a single canal were selected. The teeth were randomly assigned to two groups, according to the technique used for root canal preparation: Group I - manual instrumentation with stainless steel files; Group II - mechanical instrumentation with RaCe rotary nickel-titanium instruments. In each tooth, root dentin thickness of the buccal, lingual, mesial and distal surfaces in the apical, middle and cervical thirds of the canal was measured (in mm) using a multislice CT scanner (Siemens Emotion, Duo). Data were stored in the SPSS v. 11.5 and SigmaPlot 2001 v. 7.101 softwares. After crown opening, working length was determined, root canals were instrumented and new CT scans were taken for assessment of root dentin thickness. Pre- and post-instrumentation data were compared and analyzed statistically by ANOVA and Tukey's post-hoc test for significant differences (p=0.05). Based on the findings of this study, it may be concluded that regarding dentin removal from root canal walls during instrumentation, neither of the techniques can be considered more effective than the other.


1970 ◽  
Vol 9 (4) ◽  
pp. 223-230
Author(s):  
Krishna Prasad Parvathaneni ◽  
Beena Rani Goel ◽  
Bharani Devi Parvathaneni

The main advantage of nickel titanium instruments is that they permit canal preparation with less transportation and ledging. Hand used Ni-Ti and rotary Ni-Ti instruments have a wider range of elastic deformation and greater flexibility. The aim of the present study was to evaluate and compare the preparation time, loss of working length, apical transportation, instrument deformation and fracture with stainless steel, Ni-Ti hand and Ni-Ti rotary endodontic instruments. Fifty freshly extracted human mandibular molars with curved roots were collected and stored in 10% formalin. The samples were divided into 3 groups of 15 each. The access opening was made for each tooth and the biomechanical preparation was carried out using crown down pressureless technique in all the groups. Group I was instrumented with stainless steel files, group II with hand Ni-Ti and group III with Ni-Ti rotary files. The preparation time to enlarge each canal was recorded in minutes and seconds, which included only active instrumentation. Following preparation, the final length of each canal was subtracted from the original length to give the loss of working length. SEM photographs of the deformed and fractured instruments were taken. The apical transportation was measured using computer software (Microdraw 4.1). The readings were noted and statistically analyzed.The results of this in vitro study showed that the mean preparation time was less with Ni- Ti rotary (1.85 min) when compared to hand Ni-Ti (6.33) and stainless steel files (6.73), which was statistically significant. The loss of working length was more for stainless steel group which was statistically significant (P<0.05) when compared with the other 2 groups.One instrument in stainless steel and one in Ni-Ti rotary files were fractured. Only one instrument in stainless steel file deformed permanently. Apical transportation was found to be greater in stainless steel group than other groups (P<0.01) which was statistically significant. Considering the parameters in this study, Ni-Ti rotary files proved to perform better than the other two groups. Key words: Canal preparation; crown-down pressure less technique; double exposure radiographic technique. DOI: 10.3329/bjms.v9i4.6689Bangladesh Journal of Medical Science Vol.09 No.4 July 2010 pp.223-230


1995 ◽  
Vol 113 (5) ◽  
pp. 569-581 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bret E. Sherman ◽  
Richard A. Chole

BACKGROUND: Recent investigations have demonstrated a link between sympathectomy and osteoclast-mediated bone resorption. The exact nature of this link, however, is unknown, We hypothesize that substance P, a potent vasoconstrictive neuropeptide found in peripheral sensory fibers, including those innervating bone, is the mediator of this phenomenon. To test this theory, the effects of substance P on in vitro calcium release from cultured neonatal mouse calvaria were assessed. In addition, an in vivo study was conducted whereby gerbils were injected with capsaicin to eliminate substance P-containing fibers before sympathectomy with 6-hydroxydopamine. If the effects of 6-hydroxydopamine were eliminated by prior administration of capsaicin, the role of sensory nerves in sympathectomy-induced resorption would be strongly implicated. IN VITRO STUDY: Substance P at 10−8 mol/L was incubated with eight newborn Swiss-Webster mouse hemicalvarial explants and compared with explants incubated in control media alone. The neonatal mice were euthanized at day 3, and their hemicalvaria were preincubated in 2 ml of stock media without treatment for 24 hours at 36.5° C as a stabilization period. After the stabilization period, the stock media were replaced with 2 ml of fresh control media or media containing substance P at 10−8 mol/L. A similar experiment was performed with the addition of indomethacin at 5 × 10−7. The explants were then incubated for 72 hours with gassing every 12 hours with a mixture of O2, N2, and CO2. At the end of the 72-hour period, the media were analyzed for calcium content by atomic absorption spectrophotometry and compared by one-way analysis of variance with Bonferroni-corrected post hoc tests. IN VSVO STUDY: Forty-eight Mongolian gerbils were placed into four groups: group 1 received intraperitoneal injections of 6-hydroxydopamine at 75 μg/gm body weight on days 1, 2, 6, 7, and 8; group 2 received identical injections of hydroxydopamine, but 12 hours after receiving subdermal injections of capsaicin at 50 μg/gm body weight; group 3 received only subdermal injections of capsaicin; and group 4 received only saline injections to serve as controls. Seven days after treatment, the animals were euthanized, and the ventral wall of each animal's right bulla was resected and quantified for osteoclast number and surface with a computer-based histomor-phometry system. Analysis was then made by one-way analysis of variance with Bonferroni-corrected post hoc tests. RESULTS: The results of the in vitro study revealed that substance P at 10−8 mol/L (11.05 ± 3.37 μg/ml) induced significant calcium release from cultured neonatal mouse calvaria when compared with control bone incubated in base media alone (0.92 ± 2.85 μg/ml, p < 0.01). The process was completely inhibited by 5.0 × 10−7 indomethacin. The results of the in vivo study showed 6-hydroxydopamine treatment significantly increased both the osteoclast number (NOc/TL = 3.14 ± 1.33/mm) and the osteoclast surface (OcS/BS = 16.04% ± 6.95%) of bone when compared with bone from saline-treated controls (NOc/TL = 1,77 ± 0.79/mm, p < 0.01; OcS/BS = 8.88% ± 4.15%, p < 0.01), These 6-hydroxydopamine-induced increases were eliminated, however, in animals pretreated with capsaicin before sympathectomy (NOc/TL = 1.86 ± 0.68/mm, p > 0.05; OcS/BS = 9.92 ± 3.73, p > 0.05), whereas treatment with capsaicin alone had no effect when compared with bone from saline-treated controls (NOc/TL = 2.02 ± 0.50/mm, p > 0.05; OcS/BS = 10.28% ± 2.62%, p > 0.05), Substance P has thus been shown to induce calcium release from membranous bone in vitro, whereas capsaicin, a substance P-specific sensory neurolytic chemical, eliminates the in vivo osteoclast-inductive effects of 6-hydroxydopamine when given 12 hours before treatment. The results indicate that substance P is capable of inducing resorption and that substance P-containing sensory nerves are required for the induction of resorption after sympathectomy in the gerbil.


2013 ◽  
Vol 14 (4) ◽  
pp. 629-634 ◽  
Author(s):  
E Sujayeendranath Reddy ◽  
Dinapadu Sainath ◽  
M Narenderreddy ◽  
Srikanth Pasari ◽  
Sangeetha Vallikanthan ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Aim This in vitro study is an attempt to compare the effectiveness in cleaning oval shaped root canals usingAnatomic Endodontic Technology (AET®), ProFile system® and Manual Instrumentation with K-files Methodology Sixty oval shaped single rooted maxillary and mandibular premolars with straight canals were divided in to three groups. The root canals were, confirmed as being oval shape by means of radiographs made in a buccolingual and mesiodistal direction. Automated canal preparation was performed using Anatomic Endodontic Technology (group 1) and the ProFile system® (group 2). Manual instrumentation (group 3) was performed with k-files. Irrigation was performed using alternatively 3% NaOCl and 17% EDTA, followed by rinsing with normal saline. The roots were split longitudinally into two halves and examined under a scanning electron microscope. The presence of debris and smear layer was recorded at distances 1, 5 and 10 mm from the working length using a three step scoring scale. Mean scores for debris and smear layer was calculated and statistically analyzed for between and within groups significance, using the Kruskal-Wallis nonparametric ANOVA test and Bonferroni's multiple comparison test. Results At 1, 5 and 10 mm levels the root canals prepared with AET had significantly less surface debris and smear layer on the canal walls as compared to canals prepared with ProFile system® or manual instrumentation. For all three groups significantly lower mean smear layer scores (p < 0.05) were recorded at 5 and 10 mm levels compared with the 1 mm level. Significantly lower mean debris scores (p < 0.05) were also recorded at 5 and 10 mm levels for the AET group whereas no significant differences were found between the three levels for the ProFile system® and manual instrumentation groups. Conclusion Although better instrumentation scores were obtained in canals prepared with AET, complete cleanliness was not achieved with any of the techniques and instruments investigated. How to cite this article Reddy ES, Sainath D, Narenderreddy M, Pasari S, Vallikanthan S, Sindhurareddy G. Cleaning Efficiency of Anatomic Endodontic Technology, ProFile System and Manual Instrumentation in Oval-shaped Root Canals: An in vitro Study. J Contemp Dent Pract 2013;14(4):629-634.


2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (14) ◽  
pp. 1025-1029
Author(s):  
Aparna V. Muraleedhar ◽  
Sarvapelli Venkata Satish ◽  
Ashwini M. Patil ◽  
Suresh Kumar Kovvuru ◽  
Snehalatha Patil

BACKGROUND The primary goal of endodontic retreatment is to take out the root filling completely to ensure that the canal is completely cleaned. Gutta percha removal using hand instruments is a time-consuming procedure and tedious for the operator. Therefore, various nickel titanium instruments have been introduced for the effective retrieval of gutta percha. This study was done to compare the efficacy of three different rotary systems compared with manual instrumentation for gutta percha removal during retreatment. METHODS Forty-eight single rooted premolars were prepared and obturated using gutta percha and AH Plus sealer using lateral compaction technique. Samples were randomly divided into four groups of 12 specimens each. Group 1 was retreated with Hedstrom Files (H-Files), group 2 was retreated with pro taper universal retreatment files (PTUR), group 3 with R-Endo retreatment files and group 4 with Neoendo retreatment files. Time taken for the retreatment was recorded for each tooth using a stopwatch. The samples were sectioned longitudinally and observed under a stereomicroscope. Digital images were taken and analysed using digital image analysing software. The data was statistically analysed using Kruskal-Wallis and Post-hoc Mann-Whitney test. RESULTS The Neoendo group showed significantly lower amount of residual material compared to PTUR, R-Endo and the H-Files (P = 0.00). The maximum residual material was observed in the H file group. The time taken for gutta percha removal was least for the Neoendo group followed by PTUR, R-Endo and H-Files. CONCLUSIONS None of the instruments were able to remove the filling material completely. Gutta percha removal using Neoendo and protaper universal retreatment files were faster and more efficient compared to REndo and H files. KEY WORDS Endodontic Retreatment, Protaper Universal Retreatment Files, R-Endo, Neoendo, HFiles


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