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Effect of Emergency Pulpotomy Versus Pulp Extirpation on Anesthetic Efficacy in Endodontic Treatment of Acute Pulpitis

Cairo University (CU) logo

Cairo University (CU)

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Symptomatic Irreversible Pulpits

Treatments

Other: emergency pulpotomy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

Irreversible pulpitis is an inflammatory condition of the dental pulp, highly painful, and one of the main reasons for seeking emergency dental treatment. Pain associated with irreversible pulpitis represents more than 45% of emergency patients in dental clinics. A pulpotomy has been demonstrated as an emergency intervention for effective pain relief by removing the coronal pulp tissue without penetrating radicular pulpal tissue. Inflammation and degeneration of the pulp usually progress apically from the point of infection, so selective removal of this tissue in the form of pulpotomy is usually effective in controlling pain and patient sedation.

The rationale behind emergency pulpotomy is relieving acute dental pain caused by irreversible pulpitis. However, there is still insufficient evidence to determine whether the presence, nature and duration of clinical symptoms gives accurate information about the extent of pulp inflammation, as pulpotomy was found to be an effective emergency treatment strategy with respect to relieving clinical symptoms, even in cases of irreversible pulpitis with symptomatic apical periodontitis . Advanced diagnostic strategies are needed to determine whether there is a correlation between clinical symptoms, actual pulpal inflammation and achieving adequate pain relief during and after treatment. Thus, we are conducting this study to assess the effect of emergency pulpotomy versus complete pulp extirpation on relieving acute dental pain of symptomatic irreversible pulpitis in mandibular molars. The expected benefit for the patients is to decrease pain during and after treatment. we also are trying to provide an evidence for the clinician in order to provide the best endodontic treatment without pain.

Full description

Irreversible pulpitis is an inflammatory condition of the dental pulp, highly painful, and one of the main reasons for seeking emergency dental treatment. Pain associated with irreversible pulpitis represents more than 45% of emergency patients in dental clinics. A pulpotomy has been demonstrated as an emergency intervention for effective pain relief by removing the coronal pulp tissue without penetrating radicular pulpal tissue. Inflammation and degeneration of the pulp usually progress apically from the point of infection, so selective removal of this tissue in the form of pulpotomy is usually effective in controlling pain and patient sedation.

Enrollment

78 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 65 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patients who are medically free from any systemic disease that may contra indicate our interventions.
  • Patient's age between 18-65 years old.
  • Mandibular molar having vital pulps with symptomatic irreversible pulpitis because this group of patients may have more endodontic pain
  • Positive patient's acceptance for participation in the study.

Exclusion criteria

    • Patients who had used any type of analgesic medication during the preceding 12 hours before the treatment to give true response of pain during treatment.
  • Teeth with necrotic pulp.
  • Pregnant patients or lactating because of radiographic hazards and use of analgesics.
  • Any known sensitivity or adverse reactions to ibuprofen.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Other

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

78 participants in 2 patient groups

emergency pulpotomy
Experimental group
Description:
intervention arm
Treatment:
Other: emergency pulpotomy
complete pulp extirpation
Active Comparator group
Description:
control arm
Treatment:
Other: emergency pulpotomy

Trial contacts and locations

0

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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