Abstract

The purpose was to assess the elimination of Enterococcus faecalis in vitro in human mandibular premolars after chemomechanical preparation with or without the use of a calcium hydroxide dressing. After 60 days of contamination with E. faecalis, the root canals were prepared using the Crown-Down technique combined with 2% chlorhexidine gel irrigation. Then, the specimens were divided into two experimental groups, treated in a single visit or in multiple visits, and two control groups. The multiple-visit group received a dressing with calcium hydroxide for 14 days (Calen) and the single-visit group did not receive any medication. In the two control groups, the canals were filled with BHI after chemomechanical preparation with 2% chlorhexidine gel or distilled water. Microbial samples were taken from the root canals for colony forming unit count for each phase of the treatment using sterile paper points inside the root canal lumen. Data were ranked and analyzed by the Kruskal-Wallis statistical test. The residual microbial colonies were then assessed. The results showed that chemomechanical preparation using 2% chlorhexidine gel with no intra-canal dressing reduced by 100% the E. faecalis contamination of the root canal lumen. The calcium-hydroxide group that received the 14-day intra-canal dressing allowed a small number of bacteria to grow between visits, but without statistical differences between groups.

Highlights

  • Root canal treatments in a single visit or in multiple visits should be viewed as part of a total endodontic treatment spectrum, with the choice of one over the other being determined by the circumstances peculiar to each particular case and the technique being chosen that best fits those circumstances.[2]Peters, Wesselink[15] (2002) showed that positive cultures immediately before root canal filling did not influence the outcome of the treatment in both single- and multiple-visit treatments

  • The purpose was to assess the elimination of Enterococcus faecalis in vitro in human mandibular premolars after chemomechanical preparation with or without the use of a calcium hydroxide dressing

  • In the two control groups, the canals were filled with BHI after chemomechanical preparation with 2% chlorhexidine gel or distilled water

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Wesselink[15] (2002) showed that positive cultures immediately before root canal filling did not influence the outcome of the treatment in both single- and multiple-visit treatments. Chemomechanical preparation is the most important procedure to optimize root canal disinfection since it is possible to perform root canal fillings in a single visit and obtain a similar success rate as that of treatments carried out in multiple sessions. According to Peters et al.[14] (2002), the teeth that receive calcium hydroxide intra-canal dressing, in vivo, permit microbial growth between visits. The success rate of single-visit endodontics is 92%, against 93% for multiple-visit root-canal treatment, and it is an alternative to twovisit root canal treatment in pulpless teeth.[21]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call