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itle: Evaluation of Pulpotomy using Neoputty MTA vs. Pulpectomy using Metapex in Children (4-9 years).
Objective: Compare clinical and radiographic success of pulpotomy vs. pulpectomy for vital primary molars with irreversible pulpitis.
Design: Randomized controlled trial with 2-arm parallel groups.
Participants: Healthy children aged 4-9 with specific inclusion/exclusion criteria.
Outcomes: Primary (pain relief, absence of complications) and secondary (radiographic success).
Full description
Background and Rationale Treating irreversible pulpitis in primary molars is challenging due to complex root canal anatomy and rapid progression of pulp inflammation. Pulpectomy is the standard approach, but its technical difficulty often necessitates referral to specialists. New bioactive materials like Neoputty MTA and improved understanding of pulp biology justify reevaluation of less invasive treatments like pulpotomy. This study addresses the lack of clinical trials comparing pulpotomy with pulpectomy in cases of irreversible pulpitis in primary molars. Aim To compare the clinical and radiographic success of pulpotomy using Neoputty MTA vs. pulpectomy using Metapex in vital primary molars with symptomatic irreversible pulpitis in children aged 49 years. Hypothesis Null Hypothesis: No significant difference in treatment outcome between pulpotomy and pulpectomy.
Methodology Participants
Secondary: Pain assessment at 24 hours and 7 days post-treatment using VAS. Follow-up Timeline Evaluations at baseline, 24h, 1w, 3m, 6m, 9m, and 12m post-intervention. Randomization and Blinding Randomization via opaque sealed envelopes. Outcome assessors blinded.
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Inclusion criteria
Symptoms typical of irreversible pulpitis, such as spontaneous, unprovoked pain lasting from a few seconds to several hours prior to the dental visit, or pain exacerbated by hot and/or cold stimuli that lingers even after the stimuli are removed.
Confirmation of tooth vitality post-deroofing the pulp chamber, indicated by the presence of uniformly reddish-pink vascular tissue (healthy pulp) upon visual inspection of pulpal hemorrhage.
Confirmation of radicular pulp health post-coronal pulp amputation, demonstrated by achieving radicular pulp hemostasis within 8 minutes using a 5% sodium hypochlorite (NaOCl)-dampened cotton pellet.
The primary molar must be restorable with a stainless-steel crown. 5. Any physiological root resorption present must be less than one-third of the normal root length.
Exclusion criteria
Clinical signs of pulpal infection, such as pathologic tooth mobility, parulis/fistula, or soft tissue swelling.
Pre-operative periapical radiographs indicating furcal radiolucency extending more than half the distance from the furcation to the periapical area.
Pre-operative periapical radiographs showing periapical radiolucency. 4. Pre-operative periapical radiographs indicating pathological root resorption.
Signs of necrosis in pulp tissue post-deroofing, such as avascular or minimally bleeding pulp, or yellowish necrotic areas/purulent exudate.
Evidence of extensive radicular pulp inflammation post-coronal pulp amputation, indicated by bleeding that continues after 8 minutes of compression with a NaOCl-soaked cotton pellet.
Parents unwilling to place full coverage crowns post-treatment. 8. If both primary molars in the quadrant are painful and the clinical diagnosis of irreversible pulpitis between the teeth is not sharply defined.
Primary purpose
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Interventional model
Masking
70 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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