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Journal ArticleDOI

An evaluation of .06 tapered gutta-percha cones for filling of .06 taper prepared curved root canals.

TLDR
The .06 taper singlecone technique was comparable with lateral condensation in the amount of gutta-percha occupying a prepared .06 tapered canal and the .06 single cone technique was faster than lateral condensing.
Abstract
AIM To compare the area occupied by gutta-percha, sealer, or void in standardized .06 tapered prepared simulated curved canals and in mesio-buccal canals of extracted maxillary first molars filled with a single .06 gutta-percha point and sealer or lateral condensation of multiple .02 gutta-percha points and sealer. METHODOLOGY Simulated canals in resin blocks with either a 30 degrees curve and radius of 10.5 mm (n = 20) or a 58 degrees curve and 4.7 mm radius (n = 20) and curved mesio-buccal canals of extracted maxillary first molars (n = 20) were prepared using .06 ProFiles in a variable tip crown-down sequence to an apical size 35 at 0.5 mm from the canal terminus or apical foramen. Ten 30 degrees and 58 degrees curved resin canals and 10 canals in the extracted teeth group were obturated with .02 taper gutta-percha cones and AH 26 sealer using lateral condensation. The time required to obturate was recorded. The remaining canals were obturated with a single .06 taper gutta-percha cone and AH 26 sealer. Excess gutta-percha was removed from the specimens using heat and the warm mass vertically condensed. Horizontal sections were cut at 0.5, 1.5, 2.5, 4.5, 7.5 and 11.5 mm from the canal terminus or apical foramen. Colour photographs were taken using an Olympus 35 mm camera attached to a stereomicroscope set at x40 magnification, and then digitized using a flatbed scanner. The cross-sectional area of the canal contents was analysed using Adobe PhotoShop. The percentage of gutta-percha, sealer or voids to the total root canal area were derived and data analysed using unpaired Student's t-test and the Mann-Whitney U-test. RESULTS In the 30 degrees curved canals the levels had between 94 and 100% of the area filled with gutta-percha with no significant difference (P > 0.05) between the lateral condensation and single cone techniques. In the 58 degrees curved canals the levels had 92-99% of the area filled with gutta-percha, with the single cone technique having significantly (P 0.05) between the lateral condensation and single cone technique. The time for obturation was significantly (P < 0.05) greater for lateral condensation compared with the single cone technique in all groups. CONCLUSIONS The .06 taper single cone technique was comparable with lateral condensation in the amount of gutta-percha occupying a prepared .06 tapered canal. The .06 single cone technique was faster than lateral condensation.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Geometric factors affecting dentin bonding in root canals: a theoretical modeling approach.

TL;DR: The interaction of these two geometrically related factors (C- and S-factors) predicts that bonding of adhesive root-filling materials to root canals is highly unfavorable when compared with indirect intracoronal restorations with a similar resin film thickness.
Journal ArticleDOI

Methods of filling root canals: principles and practices

John Whitworth
- 01 Nov 2005 - 
TL;DR: This article provides an overview of current principles and practices in root canal filling and strives to untangle the limited and often contradictory research of relevance to clinical practice and performance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quality of thermoplasticized and single point root fillings assessed by micro-computed tomography.

TL;DR: All techniques produced comparable results in terms of percentage of filling and void distribution, including Thermafil and System B, and a cold gutta-percha technique (single point) by μCT analysis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sealing properties of two contemporary single-cone obturation systems.

TL;DR: It is hypothesized that the inferior coronal seal of these single-cone techniques may be improved with the placement of accessory cones to reduce sealer thickness or an immediate coronal adhesive restoration.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effectiveness of resin-coated gutta-percha cones and a dual-cured, hydrophilic methacrylate resin-based sealer in obturating root canals.

TL;DR: This study examined the effectiveness of using passively fitting cones of this type of gutta-percha with a dual-cured version of EndoREZ sealer in obturating cleaned and shaped root canals and identified interfacial gaps and silver leakage along the sealer-dentin interfaces.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Cyclic fatigue testing of nickel-titanium endodontic instruments.

TL;DR: This study supports engineering concepts of cyclic fatigue failure and suggests that standardized fatigue tests of nickel-titanium rotary instruments should include dynamic operation in a flexed state and the effect of the radius of curvature as an independent variable should be considered when evaluating studies of root canal instrumentation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Endodontic leakage studies reconsidered. Part I. Methodology, application and relevance.

TL;DR: It seems that more research should be done on leakage study methodology, instead of continuing to evaluate the sealing ability of different materials and techniques by methods that may give little relevant information.
Journal ArticleDOI

A comparison of root canal preparations using Ni-Ti hand, Ni-Ti engine-driven, and K-Flex endodontic instruments

TL;DR: This study used a modified Bramante technique and new digital subtraction software to compare root canals prepared by nickel-titanium (Ni-Ti) hand, Ni-Ti engine-driven, and stainless steel hand endodontic instruments.
Journal ArticleDOI

The effect of preparation procedures on original canal shape and on apical foramen shape.

TL;DR: Simulated curved canals were created so that canal preparation procedures could be directly visualized and compared and undesirable characteristics were produced in all preparations that would make canal filling difficult.
Journal ArticleDOI

Changes in root canal geometry after preparation assessed by high-resolution computed tomography.

TL;DR: Variations in canal geometry before preparation had more influence on the changes during preparation than the techniques themselves, Consequently studies comparing the effects of root canal instruments on canal anatomy should also consider details of the preoperative canal geometry.
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