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Radiologic assessment of quality of root canal fillings and periapical status in an Austrian subpopulation – An observational study

BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVE: Progress in endodontic techniques and methodological advances have altered root canal therapy over the last decades. These techniques and methods need periodical documentation. This observational study determined the current prevalence of endodontic treatments, and investigated...

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Autores principales: Kielbassa, Andrej M., Frank, Wilhelm, Madaus, Theresa
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5413016/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28464019
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0176724
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author Kielbassa, Andrej M.
Frank, Wilhelm
Madaus, Theresa
author_facet Kielbassa, Andrej M.
Frank, Wilhelm
Madaus, Theresa
author_sort Kielbassa, Andrej M.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVE: Progress in endodontic techniques and methodological advances have altered root canal therapy over the last decades. These techniques and methods need periodical documentation. This observational study determined the current prevalence of endodontic treatments, and investigated the relationship of various factors with the periapical status in a Lower Austrian subpopulation. METHODOLOGY: One thousand orthopantomograms of first-time university adult patients radiographed at an outpatient clinic were evaluated. For each tooth, the presence of periradicular pathosis and/or endodontic treatment was recorded, as was the quality of (post-)endodontic treatment (homogeneity and length of root canal fillings; preparation failures; posts/screws; apicoectomies; coronal restorations). Two evaluators, blinded to each other, scored all teeth. In cases of disagreement, they joined for a consensus score. RESULTS: In all, 22,586 teeth were counted. Of these, 2,907 teeth (12.9%) had periapical pathosis, while 2,504 teeth had undergone root canal treatment. Of the endodontically treated teeth, 52% showed no radiographic signs of apical periodontitis, while 44.9% had overt apical lesions, and 3,1% revealed widened periodontal ligament space. The majority of the root canal fillings was inhomogeneous (70.4%); 75.4% were rated too short, and 3.8% too long. The presence of apical pathosis was significantly correlated (odds ratio (OR) 2.556 [confidence interval (CI) 2.076–3.146]; P<0.0001) with poor root canal fillings (length and homogeneity). Posts or screws positively affected periapical status (OR 1.853 [CI 1.219–2.819]; P = 0.004), but endodontically treated posterior teeth were infrequently restored (posts, 7.5%; screws, 2.7%). Best results were found for teeth with both appropriate endodontic treatment and adequate coronal restoration. CONCLUSION: A high prevalence of periradicular radiolucencies was observed with root canal filled teeth, along with high numbers of unmet treatment needs. Periapical health was associated with adequate root canal obturation and high-grade postendodontic restorations, and quality regarding these latter aspects is considered mandatory to promote periapical health.
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spelling pubmed-54130162017-05-14 Radiologic assessment of quality of root canal fillings and periapical status in an Austrian subpopulation – An observational study Kielbassa, Andrej M. Frank, Wilhelm Madaus, Theresa PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVE: Progress in endodontic techniques and methodological advances have altered root canal therapy over the last decades. These techniques and methods need periodical documentation. This observational study determined the current prevalence of endodontic treatments, and investigated the relationship of various factors with the periapical status in a Lower Austrian subpopulation. METHODOLOGY: One thousand orthopantomograms of first-time university adult patients radiographed at an outpatient clinic were evaluated. For each tooth, the presence of periradicular pathosis and/or endodontic treatment was recorded, as was the quality of (post-)endodontic treatment (homogeneity and length of root canal fillings; preparation failures; posts/screws; apicoectomies; coronal restorations). Two evaluators, blinded to each other, scored all teeth. In cases of disagreement, they joined for a consensus score. RESULTS: In all, 22,586 teeth were counted. Of these, 2,907 teeth (12.9%) had periapical pathosis, while 2,504 teeth had undergone root canal treatment. Of the endodontically treated teeth, 52% showed no radiographic signs of apical periodontitis, while 44.9% had overt apical lesions, and 3,1% revealed widened periodontal ligament space. The majority of the root canal fillings was inhomogeneous (70.4%); 75.4% were rated too short, and 3.8% too long. The presence of apical pathosis was significantly correlated (odds ratio (OR) 2.556 [confidence interval (CI) 2.076–3.146]; P<0.0001) with poor root canal fillings (length and homogeneity). Posts or screws positively affected periapical status (OR 1.853 [CI 1.219–2.819]; P = 0.004), but endodontically treated posterior teeth were infrequently restored (posts, 7.5%; screws, 2.7%). Best results were found for teeth with both appropriate endodontic treatment and adequate coronal restoration. CONCLUSION: A high prevalence of periradicular radiolucencies was observed with root canal filled teeth, along with high numbers of unmet treatment needs. Periapical health was associated with adequate root canal obturation and high-grade postendodontic restorations, and quality regarding these latter aspects is considered mandatory to promote periapical health. Public Library of Science 2017-05-02 /pmc/articles/PMC5413016/ /pubmed/28464019 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0176724 Text en © 2017 Kielbassa et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Kielbassa, Andrej M.
Frank, Wilhelm
Madaus, Theresa
Radiologic assessment of quality of root canal fillings and periapical status in an Austrian subpopulation – An observational study
title Radiologic assessment of quality of root canal fillings and periapical status in an Austrian subpopulation – An observational study
title_full Radiologic assessment of quality of root canal fillings and periapical status in an Austrian subpopulation – An observational study
title_fullStr Radiologic assessment of quality of root canal fillings and periapical status in an Austrian subpopulation – An observational study
title_full_unstemmed Radiologic assessment of quality of root canal fillings and periapical status in an Austrian subpopulation – An observational study
title_short Radiologic assessment of quality of root canal fillings and periapical status in an Austrian subpopulation – An observational study
title_sort radiologic assessment of quality of root canal fillings and periapical status in an austrian subpopulation – an observational study
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5413016/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28464019
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0176724
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