Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
Root canal preparation is one of the most important stages in root canal treatment. Nowadays, the use of Nickel-Titanium(Ni-Ti) rotary instrument systems for root canal expansion is becoming very popular. The force required to rotate the Ni-Ti file is defined as the torque force and is considered a parameter for the stress produced within the canal. Ni-Ti rotary instruments can be used with a wide speed scale between 150 rpm (rotary per minute) and 40,000 rpm in conventional endodontic engines.
Low torque and speed values mean low pressure applied by the instruments in the root canal. With low forces and vibrations, motor noise is generally negligible, and the instruments can easily shape most root canals in a reasonable amount of time and with minimal mechanical stress (in medium-easy canals). The use of lower torque values has been shown to reduce cyclic fatigue of Ni-Ti rotary tools. With reduced cyclic fatigue, the risk of instrument breakage in complex root canal morphologies is minimized and complications that may occur during root canal treatment are reduced. However, with low torque and speed values, cutting efficiency decreases and the process time increases as the instrument advances in the canal and during possible treatment. Decreasing cutting efficiency may also result in the operator applying force to move through the canal. With the applied force, the friction resistance within the canal increases and the heat produced increases. For this reason, it is thought that the risk of post-operative pain may increase during or after the procedure.
The aim of this study is to investigate the incidence of post-operative pain and procedure time using the visual analog scale (VAS) among groups where low torque and speed values were applied during the use of the Ni-Ti rotary instrument system.
Full description
Patients with an indication for root canal treatment of the mandibular first molar tooth, who applied to Faculty of Health Sciences, Department of Endodontics, were selected. Patients aged between 18 and 65, who volunteered for the study and had no systemic disease and no preoperative pain, were included.
Patients meeting the inclusion criteria will be randomly divided into four groups (n=20) using a website (www.randomizer.org). The patient number and the randomized group from which the patient was selected will be recorded. All patients will be subjected to local anesthesia with articaine hydrochloride (Maxicaine, Istanbul) containing 1:100,000 adrenaline. After the entrance cavities of the teeth are opened with an aerator under water cooling, a rubber dam will be applied to the relevant teeth for isolation from the oral environment. After the entrance cavity is opened, the working length of the canals will be determined with the help of a No. 10 K-file (Dentsply Maillefer, Ballaigues, Switzerland) canal file and an electronic apex finder (Woodpex III, Woodpecker Medical Instrument Co, Guilin, China). In both groups, it was planned to use the NiTi rotary instrument system using V Taper Gold (Fanta Dental Material, Shanghai, China) files with the help of VDW.Silver endomotor (VDW, München, Germany). The patient groups were determined as the first group was 2N torque value and 350 rpm speed, the second group was 2N torque and 250 rpm speed, the third group was 1N torque and 350 rpm speed, and the fourth group was 1N torque and 250 rpm speed. The torque values to be applied are lower than the values recommended by the manufacturer and there is no harm in applying them in the literature. For irrigation of root canals, 2ml of 2.5% sodium hypochlorite will be used at each instrument change. For final irrigation, 17% EDTA( ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid) solution will be used. Root canals will be dried using sterile paper points. The root canals will be filled using gutta percha and a resin-containing root canal sealer (Dentsply Maillefer, Ballaigues, Switzerland) and the treatment will be completed by making the upper restoration. After the treatment, patients were given a VAS scale (Visual Analog Scale) and were instructed how to fill in their pain levels verbally and visually, 6, 12, 48, 72 hours and 1 week later. With the VAS scale, patients will be asked to note whether they use the prescribed Ibuprofen analgesic and the frequency of use. When patients come to their follow-up appointment, the forms will be taken from the patients and their post-treatment pain values will be compared. The collected data will be analyzed statistically with one-way ANOVA and post hoc Tukey tests.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
80 participants in 4 patient groups
Loading...
Central trial contact
Ahmet D Uygun, Assoc. Prof.; Betül Karaağaç, R. A.
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal