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UnknownNCT03743233

Hand and Engine-driven Techniques for Endodontic Retreatment

Hand and Engine-driven Techniques for Endodontic Retreatment: Randomized Clinical Trial

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
80 (estimated)
Sponsor
Federal University of Pelotas · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 70 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Numerous instrumentation techniques have been suggested for the nonsurgical retreatment of teeth with primary failure of endodontic therapy in laboratory studies. However, there is limited clinical evidence about those different techniques. The objective of this study is to compare the prevalence and intensity of postoperative pain, as well as the success rate after endodontic retreatment with hand or engine-driven reciprocating instrumentation. A randomized clinical trial will be performed, considering two comparison groups: hand preparation with stainless steel instruments or engine-driven reciprocating preparation with the Reciproc NiTi System (VDW, Munich, Germany), to verify which technique would lead to lower postoperative pain levels and higher endodontic success rates. Secondary outcomes related to technique efficiency will be also registered, evaluating the capacity of filling material removal and the time spent on the clinical procedures. Eighty individuals who need endodontic retreatment in single-rooted teeth will be selected (n=40/group). Endodontic reintervention will be carried out in two visits. Periapical radiographs taken after root filling removal protocols will be transferred to an image analysis software. Then, the percentage of remaining filling material in relation to the total area of the root canal will be evaluated. The clinical time spent with the removal procedure protocol will be registered, in minutes, by a digital stopwatch. After each visit, postoperative pain will be assessed using a numerical rating scale. The record of pain and analgesic drug intake will be performed in 12, 24, 48 hours and 7 days after the clinical procedures. Success rates will be evaluated after 3, 6, 12 and 24 months, through clinical and radiographic examination, considering the Periapical Index, a 5-point score system. Data of both groups (percentage of remaining debris, operating time, postoperative pain, clinical and radiographic success) will be analyzed for normality by the Shapiro-Wilk test. Assuming normal distribution, the data will be compared by t test. Pearson's correlation coefficient will be applied to detect possible correlations between the evaluated outcomes. Differences will be considered significant at P=0.05.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEHand fileA crown-down technique will be performed until reaching the provisory WL. The root canals will be initially deobstructed with size #3 and #2 Gates-Glidden burs (Dentsply-Maillefer) at the coronal and middle root thirds. Then, hand stainless steel K-files (Dentsply-Maillefer) with decreasing sizes will be used (#40, #35, #30, #25). The WL will be determined by an electronic apex locator (Novapex; Forum Technologies, Rishon Le-Zion, Israel). A radiograph will be taken to confirm the WL, which should be 1 mm short of the root apex. Apical patency will be reached and maintained with a size #15 K-file (Dentsply-Maillefer). The root canals will be reinstrumented and a size #50 K-file will be standardized as the master apical instrument. A step-back procedure in 1-mm increments followed until merging with the crown-down rotary enlargement (size #70) will be achieved.
DEVICEReciprocatingReciproc R25 file will be used for gutta-percha removal, until reaching the WL. The instrument will be introduced into the canal applying slight movements of 3-mm amplitude. Apical patency will be maintained with a size #15 K-file. The root canals will be reinstrumented using the Reciproc R50 file. For both groups, after the root canal filling removal and reinstrumentation protocol, a new radiograph will be taken, without any intracanal instrument, for posterior analysis of the percentage of remaining filling material in the root canal. If the radiograph demonstrates the persistence of filling material, the technique will be repeated with the last instrument used in the chemomechanical preparation (hand or reciprocating file), also using H-files with circumferential movements against the dentinal walls in order to remove these residual material, followed by abundant irrigation with NaOCl.

Timeline

Start date
2018-12-01
Primary completion
2019-11-01
Completion
2020-03-01
First posted
2018-11-16
Last updated
2018-11-16

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Brazil

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03743233. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.