» Articles » PMID: 11482718

Apical Extrusion of Debris and Irrigants Using Two Hand and Three Engine-driven Instrumentation Techniques

Overview
Journal Int Endod J
Specialty Dentistry
Date 2001 Aug 3
PMID 11482718
Citations 64
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Aim: To evaluate the weight of debris and irrigant volume extruded apically from extracted teeth in vitro after endodontic instrumentation using the balanced force technique, a hybrid hand instrumentation technique, and three engine-driven techniques utilizing nickel-titanium instruments (ProFile .04, Quantec 2000 and Pow-R).

Methodology: Five groups of 20 extracted human teeth with single canals were instrumented using one or other of five techniques: balanced force, hybrid, Quantec 2000, ProFile .04, or Pow-R. Debris extruded from the apical foramen during instrumentation were collected into preweighed 1.5 mL tubes. Following instrumentation, the volume of extruded irrigant fluid was determined by visual comparison to control centrifuge tubes filled with 0.25 mL increments of distilled water. The weight of dry extruded dentine debris was also established.

Results: Overall, the engine-driven techniques extruded less debris than the manual ones. However, there was no statistical difference between the balanced force technique and the engine-driven methods. The volume of irrigant extruded through the apex was directly associated with the weight of extruded debris, except within the ProFile group. The hybrid technique was associated with the greatest extrusion of both debris and irrigant.

Conclusions: Overall, the engine-driven nickel-titanium systems were associated with less apical extrusion.

Citing Articles

Evaluation of apically extruded debris following glide-path preparation with different file systems.

Nayak G, Pradeep P, Pai A, Singh N, Banerjee A, Vartak C Bioinformation. 2024; 20(6):683-689.

PMID: 39131523 PMC: 11312319. DOI: 10.6026/973206300200683.


Assessment of apical extrusion in regenerative endodontics: a comparative study of different irrigation methods using three-dimensional immature tooth models.

Abat V, Bayrak G, Gundogar M Odontology. 2024; 113(1):213-221.

PMID: 38913232 PMC: 11717896. DOI: 10.1007/s10266-024-00961-x.


Assessment of Bacterial Load and Post-Endodontic Pain after One-Visit Root Canal Treatment Using Two Types of Endodontic Access Openings: A Randomized Controlled Clinical Trial.

Al-Ani A, Ali A, Koller G Dent J (Basel). 2024; 12(4).

PMID: 38668000 PMC: 11049031. DOI: 10.3390/dj12040088.


Microscopic Evaluation of Dentinal Defects after Root Canal Preparation with Different Hand and Nickel-Titanium Files; An Study.

Karia H, Vaghela I, Dhanesha A, Mrugnayani , Solanki P, Rathwa R J Pharm Bioallied Sci. 2024; 16(Suppl 1):S711-S713.

PMID: 38595627 PMC: 11000995. DOI: 10.4103/jpbs.jpbs_960_23.


Influence of endodontic motors on the behaviour of root canal shaping instruments: an in vitro comparative study.

Reynette C, Giess R, Davril J, Martrette J, Mortier E, Balthazard R BDJ Open. 2023; 9(1):51.

PMID: 38030624 PMC: 10687023. DOI: 10.1038/s41405-023-00179-z.