Efficacy of reciprocating and rotary techniques for removing filling material during root canal retreatment
International Endodontic Journal
Abstract
Aim
To
compare the efficacy of reciprocating and rotary techniques with that
of hand files for removing gutta-percha and sealer from root canals.
Methodology
The
roots canals of fifty-four human extracted maxillary central incisors
were cleaned and shaped using a crown-down technique to a size 40 and
filled with gutta-percha and a zinc-oxide-eugenol based sealer using a
lateral compaction technique. Teeth were divided into three groups
according to the technique used for removing the root filling material:
Group I - Gates-Glidden burs and stainless steel hand files up to size
50; Group II - rotary technique with NiTi Mtwo R files and additional
Mtwo files to size 50, 0.04 taper; Group III - reciprocating technique
with the Reciproc instrument R50, size 50, 0.05 taper. Chloroform was
used as a solvent in all groups. Teeth were then split longitudinally,
and photographed under 8X magnification. The images were transferred to a
computer and the total canal space and remaining filling material were
quantified. The ratio of remaining filling material to root canal
periphery was computed with the aid of Image Tool 3.0 software. The mean
percentages of remaining filling material and time required to remove
it were compared using the Kruskal-Wallis and Mann-Whitney tests
(p < 0.05).
Results
The
mean percentage of remaining filling material was significantly higher
(p < 0.05) in Group II, with Mtwo rotary files (12.17%) than in Group
I, with the hand file technique (7.19%) and Group III, with Reciproc
instruments (4.57%), which were statistically similar (p > 0.05). The
time required to remove filling material was significantly shorter (p
< 0.05) in Group III (194 s), followed by Group II (365 s) and Group I
(725 s) (p < 0.05).
Conclusion
Remaining
endodontic filling material was observed on the canal walls of all
teeth regardless of the technique used. Hand files combined with
Gates-Glidden burs (Group I) and the reciprocating technique (Group III)
removed more filling material from the canal walls than the Mtwo R
files. The reciprocating technique was the most rapid method for
removing gutta-percha and sealer, followed by the rotary technique and
the hand file technique.
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