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Success Rate of Nonsurgical Endodontic Treatment of Nonvital Teeth with Variable Periradicular Lesions

INTRODUCTION: Bacterial infection of tooth pulp can progress into periapical diseases. Root canal treatment has been established as the best treatment. In cases of failure, nonsurgical retreatment of teeth is preferred to surgical procedure and extraction. MATERIALS AND METHODS: In this historical c...

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Autores principales: Moazami, Fariborz, Sahebi, Safoora, Sobhnamayan, Fereshte, Alipour, Abbas
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Iranian Center for Endodontic Research 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3487520/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23130063
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author Moazami, Fariborz
Sahebi, Safoora
Sobhnamayan, Fereshte
Alipour, Abbas
author_facet Moazami, Fariborz
Sahebi, Safoora
Sobhnamayan, Fereshte
Alipour, Abbas
author_sort Moazami, Fariborz
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Bacterial infection of tooth pulp can progress into periapical diseases. Root canal treatment has been established as the best treatment. In cases of failure, nonsurgical retreatment of teeth is preferred to surgical procedure and extraction. MATERIALS AND METHODS: In this historical cohort study, 104 permanent teeth with apical lesion were treated during 2002-2008. All teeth showed radiographic evidence of periapical lesion varying in size from 1 to >10mm. A total of 55 teeth were treated with initial root canal treatment and 49 teeth required retreatment. Patients were recalled up to ≈7 years. All radiographs were taken by RSV MAC digital imaging set and long cone technique. The presence/absence of signs and symptoms and periapical index scores (PAI) were used for measuring outcome. Teeth were classified as healed (clinical/radiographic absence of signs and symptoms) or diseased (clinical/radiographic presence of signs and symptoms). The data were statistically analyzed using student t-test and Pearson chi-square or fisher’s exact test. RESULTS: The rate of complete healing for teeth with initial treatment was 89.7%, and for retreatment group was 85.7%; there was no significant difference. Size of lesions did not significantly affect the treatment outcomes. Success of tooth treatment did not reveal significant correlation with gender and number of roots. CONCLUSION: Orthograde endodontic treatment/retreatment demonstrates favorable outcomes. Thus, nonsurgical endodontic treatment/retreatment should be considered as the first choice in teeth with large periapical lesion.
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spelling pubmed-34875202012-11-05 Success Rate of Nonsurgical Endodontic Treatment of Nonvital Teeth with Variable Periradicular Lesions Moazami, Fariborz Sahebi, Safoora Sobhnamayan, Fereshte Alipour, Abbas Iran Endod J Original Article INTRODUCTION: Bacterial infection of tooth pulp can progress into periapical diseases. Root canal treatment has been established as the best treatment. In cases of failure, nonsurgical retreatment of teeth is preferred to surgical procedure and extraction. MATERIALS AND METHODS: In this historical cohort study, 104 permanent teeth with apical lesion were treated during 2002-2008. All teeth showed radiographic evidence of periapical lesion varying in size from 1 to >10mm. A total of 55 teeth were treated with initial root canal treatment and 49 teeth required retreatment. Patients were recalled up to ≈7 years. All radiographs were taken by RSV MAC digital imaging set and long cone technique. The presence/absence of signs and symptoms and periapical index scores (PAI) were used for measuring outcome. Teeth were classified as healed (clinical/radiographic absence of signs and symptoms) or diseased (clinical/radiographic presence of signs and symptoms). The data were statistically analyzed using student t-test and Pearson chi-square or fisher’s exact test. RESULTS: The rate of complete healing for teeth with initial treatment was 89.7%, and for retreatment group was 85.7%; there was no significant difference. Size of lesions did not significantly affect the treatment outcomes. Success of tooth treatment did not reveal significant correlation with gender and number of roots. CONCLUSION: Orthograde endodontic treatment/retreatment demonstrates favorable outcomes. Thus, nonsurgical endodontic treatment/retreatment should be considered as the first choice in teeth with large periapical lesion. Iranian Center for Endodontic Research 2011 2011-08-15 /pmc/articles/PMC3487520/ /pubmed/23130063 Text en Copyright © Iranian Endodontic Journal, 2011. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Article
Moazami, Fariborz
Sahebi, Safoora
Sobhnamayan, Fereshte
Alipour, Abbas
Success Rate of Nonsurgical Endodontic Treatment of Nonvital Teeth with Variable Periradicular Lesions
title Success Rate of Nonsurgical Endodontic Treatment of Nonvital Teeth with Variable Periradicular Lesions
title_full Success Rate of Nonsurgical Endodontic Treatment of Nonvital Teeth with Variable Periradicular Lesions
title_fullStr Success Rate of Nonsurgical Endodontic Treatment of Nonvital Teeth with Variable Periradicular Lesions
title_full_unstemmed Success Rate of Nonsurgical Endodontic Treatment of Nonvital Teeth with Variable Periradicular Lesions
title_short Success Rate of Nonsurgical Endodontic Treatment of Nonvital Teeth with Variable Periradicular Lesions
title_sort success rate of nonsurgical endodontic treatment of nonvital teeth with variable periradicular lesions
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3487520/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23130063
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