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The purpose of this RCT is to compare the clinical/radiographic outcomes of Potassium nitrate in polycarboxylate cement and MTA as pulpotomy biomaterials used for asymptomatic vital primary lower second molar and this will help to clinically evaluate the use of alternative material in vital pulpotomy in primary molars with deep carious cavities.
Emphasis is set on avoiding total pupectomy and maintaining radicular pulp vitality therefore maintain the tooth in a viable condition till it's shedding and eruption of the permanent successor.
Full description
Introduction:
Dental caries continues to be a significant health issue, with a very high prevalence in children worldwide. For a variety of reasons (lack of proper dental education, lack of access to dental care, "silent symptomatology," etc.), treatment is frequently initiated once the progression degree has reached a deep, cavitated stage, often with pulp involvement. The primary purpose of pulp therapy in deciduous dentition is to promote the health of the teeth and their supporting tissues in order to maintain the proper functions of the oro-facial complex (mastication, speech, aesthetics), and ultimately to retain the teeth in their position to preserve arch length. Primary teeth are referred to as "the best space maintainers" as they effectively preserve space for their successors.
Carious primary teeth with normal pulp or reversible pulpitis should be treated with vital pulp procedures. Currently, three vital pulp therapy (VPT) options exist for treating deep dentin caries lesions approximating the pulp in vital primary teeth: indirect pulp treatment (IPT), direct pulp cap (DPC), and pulpotomy.
VPT is primarily recommended to be performed in young patients because of the high healing capacity of pulp tissue compared to older patients. An adequate blood supply is required to maintain the pulp's vitality. Furthermore, the presence of a healthy periodontium is required for VPT to be effective, as teeth with moderate to severe periodontal disease are not candidates for treatment. In cases with an inadequate coronal seal and subsequent bacterial microleakage, the prognosis for VPT is significantly reduced.
Pulpotomy is a conservative clinical procedure performed on pediatric patients, and most recently on adult patients too, that involves the removal of the coronal pulp while preserving the radicular pulp. The rationale is based on the healing capacity of the remaining pulp tissue following surgical amputation of the affected or infected coronal pulp. Following hemostasis, the exposed pulp is covered with either a pulp-capping agent that promotes healing or an agent to fix the underlying tissue.
Most recently, Mineral Trioxide Aggregate (MTA) has been the gold standard material for primary tooth pulpotomy. MTA has antimicrobial properties, excellent sealing ability, is bio-compatible and has a dentinogenic effect on pulp tissue by stimulating the release of cytokines from bone cells, which promotes hard tissue formation. Furthermore, MTA maintains pulp tissue integrity while having no cytotoxic effects. Nevertheless, the clinical application of MTA has been limited due to some properties such as its long setting time, difficulty in its handling, being washed out, discoloration, and increased cost. These urged the search for an alternative pulpotomy material to MTA.
Potassium Nitrate (KNO3) is an effective desensitizer for hypersensitive teeth9. Animal studies found satisfactory results using the combination of 5% KNO3 in polycarboxylate cement as a direct pulp capping material10. Clinical studies examined KNO3 in polycarboxylate as a pulp capping or pulpotomy material in vital pulp therapy.
Indirect capping with 5% KNO3 in polycarboxylate cement was compared to calcium hydroxide liner in treating reversible pulpitis in permanent teeth. The study found that 5% KNO3 in polycarboxylate cement provided effective analgesia and restored electrical excitability faster than calcium hydroxide.
A study showed that after two years of direct capping with KNO3 /dimethyl isosorbide/polycarboxylate cement in carious exposed vital pulp, all patients remained clinically and radiographically normal. Another 4-year clinical and radiographic evaluation of teeth treated with KNO3 in polycarboxylate for deep exposed and non-exposed carious lesions revealed a 97.7% success rate in the exposed group and 100% success rate in the non-exposed group.
Furthermore, on a recently published clinical study that was carried out on young immature lower first permanent molars in the Endodontic department, Faculty of dentistry, Cairo university, that was comparing KNO3 in polycarboxylate to MTA. It was revealed that KNO3 in polycarboxylate cement is a viable and cost-effective alternative to MTA for pulpotomy in immature caries-exposed permanent molars.
In conclusion, KNO3 in polycarboxylate offers low cost and easy manipulation. However, to our knowledge no randomized clinical trials (RCTs) have evaluated the use of polycarboxylate with KNO3 as a pulpotomy material for primary dentition.
Methods:
Study Setting and location
Intervention:
The principal investigator will carry out all treatment procedures, and the patients will be randomly assigned to any of them.
For both interventions:
Group I (Experimental group) pulpotomy using KNO3 (potassium salt, Technogene Corp., Egypt) in polycarboxylate cement:
Group II (Control group) pulpotomy using MTA (Angelus, Londrina, Brazil):
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❖ Inclusion Criteria:
Exclusion Criteria:
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
50 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Mariam M El-Mosallamy, bachelor's degree in dentistry
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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