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Can non-carious cervical lesions depth affect clinical response in pain intensity and remaining dentin thickness?

Non-carious Cervical Lesions (NCCL) are dental tissue defects, non-related to caries, frequently observed in the dental practice. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effects of NCCL on dentin depth and thickness and the response to dental pain by means of clinical diagnostic tests. 86 teeth fr...

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Autores principales: Galvão, Alexia da Mata, Gonzaga, Ramon Corrêa de Queiroz, de Oliveira, Maria Antonieta Veloso Carvalho, Machado, Alexandre Coelho, Barbosa, Gabriella Lopes de Rezende, Soares, Paulo Vinicius, da Silva, Gisele Rodrigues
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Fundação Odontológica de Ribeirão Preto 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9645175/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36287492
http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/0103-6440202204789
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author Galvão, Alexia da Mata
Gonzaga, Ramon Corrêa de Queiroz
de Oliveira, Maria Antonieta Veloso Carvalho
Machado, Alexandre Coelho
Barbosa, Gabriella Lopes de Rezende
Soares, Paulo Vinicius
da Silva, Gisele Rodrigues
author_facet Galvão, Alexia da Mata
Gonzaga, Ramon Corrêa de Queiroz
de Oliveira, Maria Antonieta Veloso Carvalho
Machado, Alexandre Coelho
Barbosa, Gabriella Lopes de Rezende
Soares, Paulo Vinicius
da Silva, Gisele Rodrigues
author_sort Galvão, Alexia da Mata
collection PubMed
description Non-carious Cervical Lesions (NCCL) are dental tissue defects, non-related to caries, frequently observed in the dental practice. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effects of NCCL on dentin depth and thickness and the response to dental pain by means of clinical diagnostic tests. 86 teeth from 14 patients with NCCL were assessed by: depth of NCCL, clinical tests (evaporative stimulus, to detect pain levels of dentin hypersensitivity, cold thermal test to classify pulp health, percussive stimuli to evaluate the periradicular tissues and cone beam computed tomography (tomography to evaluate remaining dentin thickness (RDT). In terms of depth, the sample was divided into two groups: G1- teeth with NCCLs ≤1.0mm and G2- teeth with NCCLs between 1.1-2.0 mm. Dental pain data were compared by Mann-Whitney test and RDT by Student’s t-test and correlations by the Pearson test (p<0.05). The depth of NCCL does not influence dental pain response to evaporative stimulus (p=0.129), cold thermal test (p = 0.125), vertical (p = 0.317) and horizontal (p = 0.119) percussion clinical diagnostic tests. However, G1 showed more RDT (p<0.001), and the correlation test showed that deeper NCCL presents smaller remaining dentin thickness (p=0.011/r=-0.273). In conclusion, tooth with NCCL up to 2mm-depth presents similar levels of pain for dentin hypersensitivity, pulp and periradicular tissue independent to NCCL depth, however, lesions with ≤1.0mm-depth showed greater RDT in tomographic findings.
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spelling pubmed-96451752022-11-14 Can non-carious cervical lesions depth affect clinical response in pain intensity and remaining dentin thickness? Galvão, Alexia da Mata Gonzaga, Ramon Corrêa de Queiroz de Oliveira, Maria Antonieta Veloso Carvalho Machado, Alexandre Coelho Barbosa, Gabriella Lopes de Rezende Soares, Paulo Vinicius da Silva, Gisele Rodrigues Braz Dent J Article Non-carious Cervical Lesions (NCCL) are dental tissue defects, non-related to caries, frequently observed in the dental practice. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effects of NCCL on dentin depth and thickness and the response to dental pain by means of clinical diagnostic tests. 86 teeth from 14 patients with NCCL were assessed by: depth of NCCL, clinical tests (evaporative stimulus, to detect pain levels of dentin hypersensitivity, cold thermal test to classify pulp health, percussive stimuli to evaluate the periradicular tissues and cone beam computed tomography (tomography to evaluate remaining dentin thickness (RDT). In terms of depth, the sample was divided into two groups: G1- teeth with NCCLs ≤1.0mm and G2- teeth with NCCLs between 1.1-2.0 mm. Dental pain data were compared by Mann-Whitney test and RDT by Student’s t-test and correlations by the Pearson test (p<0.05). The depth of NCCL does not influence dental pain response to evaporative stimulus (p=0.129), cold thermal test (p = 0.125), vertical (p = 0.317) and horizontal (p = 0.119) percussion clinical diagnostic tests. However, G1 showed more RDT (p<0.001), and the correlation test showed that deeper NCCL presents smaller remaining dentin thickness (p=0.011/r=-0.273). In conclusion, tooth with NCCL up to 2mm-depth presents similar levels of pain for dentin hypersensitivity, pulp and periradicular tissue independent to NCCL depth, however, lesions with ≤1.0mm-depth showed greater RDT in tomographic findings. Fundação Odontológica de Ribeirão Preto 2022-10-21 /pmc/articles/PMC9645175/ /pubmed/36287492 http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/0103-6440202204789 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License
spellingShingle Article
Galvão, Alexia da Mata
Gonzaga, Ramon Corrêa de Queiroz
de Oliveira, Maria Antonieta Veloso Carvalho
Machado, Alexandre Coelho
Barbosa, Gabriella Lopes de Rezende
Soares, Paulo Vinicius
da Silva, Gisele Rodrigues
Can non-carious cervical lesions depth affect clinical response in pain intensity and remaining dentin thickness?
title Can non-carious cervical lesions depth affect clinical response in pain intensity and remaining dentin thickness?
title_full Can non-carious cervical lesions depth affect clinical response in pain intensity and remaining dentin thickness?
title_fullStr Can non-carious cervical lesions depth affect clinical response in pain intensity and remaining dentin thickness?
title_full_unstemmed Can non-carious cervical lesions depth affect clinical response in pain intensity and remaining dentin thickness?
title_short Can non-carious cervical lesions depth affect clinical response in pain intensity and remaining dentin thickness?
title_sort can non-carious cervical lesions depth affect clinical response in pain intensity and remaining dentin thickness?
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9645175/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36287492
http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/0103-6440202204789
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