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Evaluation of Root and Root Canal Morphology of Mandibular First and Second Molars in a Greek Population: A CBCT Study

OBJECTIVE: Τo study the number of roots, canal configurations, and frequency of morphological variations in mandibular first and second molars in a Greek population. METHODS: This study examined 478 mandibular first molars and 524 mandibular second molars using a high-resolution cone-beam computed t...

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Autores principales: Kantilieraki, Eleni, Delantoni, Antigoni, Angelopoulos, Christos, Beltes, Panagiotis
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Kare Publishing 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7006552/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32161889
http://dx.doi.org/10.14744/eej.2019.19480
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author Kantilieraki, Eleni
Delantoni, Antigoni
Angelopoulos, Christos
Beltes, Panagiotis
author_facet Kantilieraki, Eleni
Delantoni, Antigoni
Angelopoulos, Christos
Beltes, Panagiotis
author_sort Kantilieraki, Eleni
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: Τo study the number of roots, canal configurations, and frequency of morphological variations in mandibular first and second molars in a Greek population. METHODS: This study examined 478 mandibular first molars and 524 mandibular second molars using a high-resolution cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT). The number of roots was recorded and the root canal configuration was categorized based on the classification by Vertucci. The presence and configuration of C-shaped root canals were recorded and they were classified according to the Fan classification. The symmetry between the right and the left side was also evaluated. RESULTS: Among the mandibular first molars, 0.2% teeth were single-rooted, 96.4% were two-rooted, and 3.3% were three-rooted. In the mandibular second molars, 12.2%, 82.8%, and 4.9% were single-rooted, two-rooted, and three-rooted, respectively. In two-rooted mandibular first and second molars, the most frequent root canal pattern observed was Vertucci’s type II in the mesial root (69.8% and 64.1%, respectively) and Vertucci’s type I in the distal root (81.7% and 97.7%, respectively). Three-rooted molars showed one oval-shaped mesial root and two distal roots (56.2% in first molars, 65.4% in second molars), where each distal root contained a single root canal (type I), and the mesial root presented either type II (53.3%), IV (26.6%), I (13.3%), or V (6.6%) canal configurations. C-shaped canals were only detected in mandibular second molars (5.3% of teeth, 10.8% of individuals), and bilateral occurrence was observed in 24.5% patients. The most frequent root canal pattern was Fan’s C1 type at the orifice, followed by C3a and C3b in the coronal and middle third, which joined into a single canal (C4) apically. CONCLUSION: The characteristics of the root and root canal anatomy of the mandibular first and second molars of Greek individuals were similar to those observed in Caucasians. However, the higher incidence of third roots in mandibular molars in Greek individuals compared to Caucasians requires absolute clinical awareness.
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spelling pubmed-70065522020-03-11 Evaluation of Root and Root Canal Morphology of Mandibular First and Second Molars in a Greek Population: A CBCT Study Kantilieraki, Eleni Delantoni, Antigoni Angelopoulos, Christos Beltes, Panagiotis Eur Endod J Original Article OBJECTIVE: Τo study the number of roots, canal configurations, and frequency of morphological variations in mandibular first and second molars in a Greek population. METHODS: This study examined 478 mandibular first molars and 524 mandibular second molars using a high-resolution cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT). The number of roots was recorded and the root canal configuration was categorized based on the classification by Vertucci. The presence and configuration of C-shaped root canals were recorded and they were classified according to the Fan classification. The symmetry between the right and the left side was also evaluated. RESULTS: Among the mandibular first molars, 0.2% teeth were single-rooted, 96.4% were two-rooted, and 3.3% were three-rooted. In the mandibular second molars, 12.2%, 82.8%, and 4.9% were single-rooted, two-rooted, and three-rooted, respectively. In two-rooted mandibular first and second molars, the most frequent root canal pattern observed was Vertucci’s type II in the mesial root (69.8% and 64.1%, respectively) and Vertucci’s type I in the distal root (81.7% and 97.7%, respectively). Three-rooted molars showed one oval-shaped mesial root and two distal roots (56.2% in first molars, 65.4% in second molars), where each distal root contained a single root canal (type I), and the mesial root presented either type II (53.3%), IV (26.6%), I (13.3%), or V (6.6%) canal configurations. C-shaped canals were only detected in mandibular second molars (5.3% of teeth, 10.8% of individuals), and bilateral occurrence was observed in 24.5% patients. The most frequent root canal pattern was Fan’s C1 type at the orifice, followed by C3a and C3b in the coronal and middle third, which joined into a single canal (C4) apically. CONCLUSION: The characteristics of the root and root canal anatomy of the mandibular first and second molars of Greek individuals were similar to those observed in Caucasians. However, the higher incidence of third roots in mandibular molars in Greek individuals compared to Caucasians requires absolute clinical awareness. Kare Publishing 2019-07-18 /pmc/articles/PMC7006552/ /pubmed/32161889 http://dx.doi.org/10.14744/eej.2019.19480 Text en Copyright: © 2019 European Endodontic Journal http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0 This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License
spellingShingle Original Article
Kantilieraki, Eleni
Delantoni, Antigoni
Angelopoulos, Christos
Beltes, Panagiotis
Evaluation of Root and Root Canal Morphology of Mandibular First and Second Molars in a Greek Population: A CBCT Study
title Evaluation of Root and Root Canal Morphology of Mandibular First and Second Molars in a Greek Population: A CBCT Study
title_full Evaluation of Root and Root Canal Morphology of Mandibular First and Second Molars in a Greek Population: A CBCT Study
title_fullStr Evaluation of Root and Root Canal Morphology of Mandibular First and Second Molars in a Greek Population: A CBCT Study
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of Root and Root Canal Morphology of Mandibular First and Second Molars in a Greek Population: A CBCT Study
title_short Evaluation of Root and Root Canal Morphology of Mandibular First and Second Molars in a Greek Population: A CBCT Study
title_sort evaluation of root and root canal morphology of mandibular first and second molars in a greek population: a cbct study
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7006552/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32161889
http://dx.doi.org/10.14744/eej.2019.19480
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