E-ISSN 2548-0839
Volume : Issue : Year : 2024

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1.8
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1.6
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Journal Citation Reports (Clarivate, 2023)(Dentistry, Oral Surgery & Medicine (Science))
SCImago Journal & Country Rank
European Endodontic Journal Increasing the Apical Sizes of Root Enlarged for Root Canal Obturation Influences the Outcome of Single-Root-Canal Teeth Affected by Apical Periodontitis [Eur Endod J]
Eur Endod J. Ahead of Print: EEJ-04274 | DOI: 10.14744/eej.2023.04274

Increasing the Apical Sizes of Root Enlarged for Root Canal Obturation Influences the Outcome of Single-Root-Canal Teeth Affected by Apical Periodontitis

Shizu Hirata-Tsuchiya1, Daisuke Furutama1, Noriko Saito-Nakayama1, Tomoya Naruse1, Tomoki Kawayanagi1, Saki Nishihama1, Ayaka Miyata1, Satomi Shirawachi1, Naoki Sadaoka1, Chutian Wang1, Kazuma Yoshida1, Jun Nakanishi1, Shinji Matsuda2, Katsuhiro Takeda1, Hideki Shiba1
1Department of Biological Endodontics, Hiroshima University, Graduate School of Biomedical and Health Sciences, Hiroshima, Japan
2Department of Periodontal Medicine, Hiroshima University, Graduate School of Biomedical and Health Sciences, Hiroshima, Japan

Objective: To investigate the effect of increasing the apical size of roots enlarged for root canal obturation on the outcome of non-surgical endodontic treatment for teeth with apical periodontitis.
Methods: In this retrospective study, we included 210 cases of single-rooted canals treated at our dental units between October 2009 and January 2022. The clinical outcomes of teeth with enlarged root apical size from the International Organization for Standardization standard numbers 25 to 100 were investigated.
Results: The number of teeth with a root apical size of ≤50 and ≥ 55 were 158 and 52, respectively. In the former case, 144 (68.6%) teeth had good prognoses and 14 (6.7%) had poor prognoses. In the latter case, 28 (13.3%) teeth had good prognoses and 24 (11.4%) had poor prognoses.
Conclusion: Unfavourable clinical outcomes were observed in root canal-filled teeth with an enlarged apical root size of ≥ 55. Thus, these sizes potentially indicate poor outcomes of nonsurgical endodontic treatments. (EEJ-2023-09-126)

Keywords: Apical periodontitis, non-surgical endodontic treatment, single-rooted canal



Corresponding Author: Shizu Hirata-Tsuchiya
Manuscript Language: English
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