The Impact of Changing from First- to Fifth-Generation Nickel-Titanium Rotaries on Root-Filling Quality in a Clinical Undergraduate Course

Authors

  • Luca Masoch University of Zurich, Clinic of Conservative and Preventive Dentistry, Zurich, Switzerland
  • Monika Marending University of Zurich, Clinic of Conservative and Preventive Dentistry, Zurich, Switzerland
  • Kevin Hofpeter University of Zurich, Clinic of Conservative and Preventive Dentistry, Zurich, Switzerland
  • Thomas Attin niversity of Zurich, Clinic of Conservative and Preventive Dentistry, Zurich, Switzerland
  • Matthias Zehnder University of Zurich, Clinic of Conservative and Preventive Dentistry, Zurich, Switzerland

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.61872/sdj-2022-10-01

PMID:

36017710

Keywords:

root canal, instrumentation, dental education

Abstract

In this retrospective study, it was investigated whether the use of a fifth-generation rotary system (ProTaper Next) resulted in improved radiological root filling quality compared to a first-generation counterpart (ProFile) in a controlled student course setting. Cases treated by fourth-year dental students in the 2020/21 academic year were collected and compared to those treated in 2019/20. Root canals in the former group were all instrumented using the ProTaper Next system, and the latter using the ProFile system. All other clinical parameters were similar between the two academic years, including the time of pre-clinical teaching, hands-on course hours, endodontic auxiliaries, and chemicals used for treatment. After excluding patients who were not available or refused to give their informed consent to this study (n = 20), and excluding teeth with missing or poor radiographs (n = 16), the fillings in 178 roots could be assessed by two calibrated observers blinded to the system that was used. The primary outcome was the radiographic quality of the root fillings according to the five-scale modified Molander score. The secondary outcome was the number of separated rotary instruments by group. Both instrumenting systems resulted in a similar number of "excellent" root fillings (score I), 59 % in the ProTaper Next group and 60% in the ProFile group, with no statistically significant difference in outcome scores between groups (Probability > ChiSquare = 0.70). Furthermore, there was merely one separated instrument in the ProTaper Next group, and none in the ProFile group (Fisher's exact test, p = 1.00).

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Published

2022-10-10

How to Cite

Masoch, L., Marending, M., Hofpeter, K., Attin, T., & Zehnder, M. (2022). The Impact of Changing from First- to Fifth-Generation Nickel-Titanium Rotaries on Root-Filling Quality in a Clinical Undergraduate Course. SWISS DENTAL JOURNAL SSO – Science and Clinical Topics, 132(10), 684-690. https://doi.org/10.61872/sdj-2022-10-01

How to Cite

Masoch, L., Marending, M., Hofpeter, K., Attin, T., & Zehnder, M. (2022). The Impact of Changing from First- to Fifth-Generation Nickel-Titanium Rotaries on Root-Filling Quality in a Clinical Undergraduate Course. SWISS DENTAL JOURNAL SSO – Science and Clinical Topics, 132(10), 684-690. https://doi.org/10.61872/sdj-2022-10-01