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European Journal of Dentistry logoLink to European Journal of Dentistry
. 2011 Jul;5(3):260–264.

Effect of Previous Calcium Hydroxide Dressing on the Sealing Properties of the New Endodontic Cement Apical Barrier

Maryam Bidar a, Reza Disfani a, Salman Gharagozlo b, Armita Rouhani a, Maryam Forghani a,
PMCID: PMC3137438  PMID: 21769266

Abstract

Objectives:

Using the fluid filtration method, an in vitro study was conducted to evaluate the effects of medication with calcium hydroxide on the sealing ability of the New Endodontic Cement (NEC) apical barrier in the short and long terms.

Methods:

Fifty extracted single rooted teeth were prepared and apical resorption produced using acid sulfuric for four days. The teeth were randomly divided into two experimental groups (n=20) and two control groups. In group 1, calcium hydroxide was placed into all canals for one week and in group 2, no medication was used. In both groups, a 4 mm NEC apical plug was placed in the canals and the remaining portion of the canals was filled with gutta-percha. The amount of microleakage of all samples was evaluated after one week and three months. The data were statistically analyzed using two-way ANOVA.

Results:

There was no significant difference between the two groups in either time period (P>.05). In both group 1 and group 2, microleakage increased after three months but this increase was not statistically significant (P>.05).

Conclusions:

According to the result of this study, medication with calcium hydroxide had no adverse effect on the short- and long-term sealing properties of an NEC apical plug.

Keywords: Calcium hydroxide, Apical barrier, Leakage, Fluid filtration, New Endodontic Cement

INTRODUCTION

Adequate endodontic therapy in an immature tooth with a necrotic pulp has many problems. The lack of an apical stop or apical constriction makes it difficult both to achieve complete debridement and to limit the filling process to within the root canal space.1 In addition to immature teeth, over-filling (iatrogenic causes) and root end resorption can lead to distraction of apical constriction.

The most common treatment method traditionally used for teeth with open apices has been cleaning and filling the canal with a temporary paste to induce the formation of calcified tissue at the apex. The term apexification is used to describe this procedure.2 Ca(OH)2 alone or in combination with other drugs is the most widely accepted material to promote apexification.3

The creation of physiologic hard tissue barrier using calcium hydroxide has several disadvantages. The treatment requires multiple appointments and takes anywhere from 3 to 18 months.1 Additional negative factors are susceptibility to fracture,4 coronal microleakage and esthetic demands during the long term treatment.5

Placement of artificial hard tissue barrier with a variety of materials has been suggested as an alternative to traditional apexification.610 The material widely employed as apical barrier is MTA. MTA’s popularity as an apical barrier can be attributed to several factors. It is biocompatible,1113 can be placed in as little as one visit,14 can induce hard tissue formation13,15 and has good sealing properties.16,17

Despite these advantages, MTA has poor handling characteristics18 and a long setting time.19

A New Endodontic Cement (NEC) consisting of different calcium compounds (e.g., calcium oxide, calcium phosphate, calcium carbonate, calcium silicate, calcium sulfate, calcium hydroxide and calcium chloride) has recently been developed whose clinical applications are similar to those of MTA. NEC and MTA have similar physical properties include working time, PH, and dimensional changes.20 They also have similar antimicrobial activity.21 NEC has good handling characteristics22 and is able to produce hydroxyapatite.23 In an ex vivo study, NEC exhibited similar sealing properties to MTA when used as root-end filling material.24 Asgary et al25 found that MTA and NEC have similar favorable biologic responses in pulp cap treatment. Since the vast majority of teeth with nonvital pulps are infected, one or two visits of calcium hydroxide therapy are performed in order to disinfect the root canal system.1 Kenee et al26 assessed the efficacy of various calcium hydroxide removal techniques and found that no technique removed all Ca(OH)2.

Due to the inability of complete removal of calcium hydroxide from dentinal walls, it is necessary to perform research on the effects of the calcium hydroxide remnants on the sealing ability of the apical barrier. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effects of calcium hydroxide on the seal of the NEC apical barrier in the short and long terms.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

Fifty extracted human maxillary single-root teeth were selected for this ex vivo experimental study. All procedures were carried out according to protocols approved by the Ethics Committee of Shaheed Beheshti University of medical sciences, Tehran, Iran in 2005. The teeth were placed in 5.25% sodium hypochlorite for five hours to remove debris. The teeth were radiographed to examine for fracture, and internal and external resorption. Clinical crowns were removed with a high-speed diamond saw (D & Z Germany) under copious water spray to create a standardized root length of about 14 mm.

The canals were prepared with K-files (Dentsply Maillefer, Tulsa, Switzerland) and Gates- Glidden drills # 1–4 (Dentsply Maillefer, Tulsa, OK) using the crown-down technique. Then the access opening was sealed with Coltozol (Coltene, Altstatten, Switzerland). The method of Ghoddusi et al. was used to develop apical resorption.27 The roots were submerged in melted rose wax up to 3 mm from the anatomic apex and then the waxed teeth were soaked in 20% sulfuric acid. After four days the teeth were rinsed with a saline solution and the wax was removed with a scalpel (Supa, Tehran, Iran). The temporary filling was also removed from the coronal access.

Then, the teeth were randomly divided into two experimental groups (n=20) and two control groups (n=5). In group 1 (n=20), calcium hydroxide was placed in each canal using a lentulo spiral (Moyco Union Brach, York, PA) and a radiograph was taken to ensure complete coverage of the canal. The teeth were stored at 100% humidity and 37°C for seven days. Following this stage the calcium hydroxide was removed with stainless steel hand files (Dentsply Maillefer, Tulsa, Switzerland) and 0.5% NaOCL irrigation. In group 2 (n=20), nothing was placed into the canals prior NEC use.

All teeth were then mounted in putty blocks to simulated clinical situation. The NEC was mixed with its liquid to provide a dense creamy mixture and was placed with a messing gun and a hand plugger at the apical end of the root. The material was condensed with the tip of hand plugger for achievement of the plug. All apical plugs of the experimental groups had the same thickness (4 mm). Next, using a size 40 K-file with a rubber stop positioned 4 mm shorter than the root canal length, the excess material was removed for fabrication of 4-mm-thick apical plugs. Radiographs were taken to ensure the proper placement and thickness of the NEC plug. Then moistened paper point was used to remove the excess NEC from the dentinal walls and teeth were stored at 100% humidity and 37°C. After seven days, the NEC plug was tested to ensure an adequate set with a k-file and the remaining portion of the canals was obturated with thermoplasticized gutta-percha without a sealer. The coronal seal was achieved by 2–3 mm thickness of Coltozol (Coltene, Altstatten, Switzerland).

In the positive control group the teeth were not filled at all. In the negative control group (n=5), the teeth were filled as in group 2, then all root surfaces and the apical barriers were covered with two layers of nail varnish. After one week and three months all samples were connected to a fluid filtration system and the amount of microleakage was evaluated.

The data were statistically analyzed using two-way ANOVA test. The significance level was defined as α=0.05.

RESULTS

The negative controls showed no evidence of bubble movement, whereas all positive controls showed immediate transportation of the air bubble.

Table 1 shows mean microleakage data in μl/min/cmH2O. Analysis of the results in both evaluation periods (one week and three months), showed no significant differences between group 1 (with calcium hydroxide medication) and group 2 (without calcium hydroxide medication) (P>.05). In both groups, microleakage increased after three months but this increase was not statistically significant (P>.05).

Table 1.

The mean microleakage of four groups in two periods of time (μL/min/cm H2O).

7 days after obturation 3 months after obturation
Sub groups Number Mean Std. Deviation Mean Std. Deviation
G1 20 0.0554 0.0069 0.0558 0.0092
G2 20 0.0562 0.0104 0.0576 0.012

DISCUSSION

Several methods that have been used to make open apex teeth include overfilling with large files28 or the retrograde application of NiTi rotary files.29 The disadvantage of these methods is that they create round apical foramen that may not resemble the natural resorption.

In this study, the Ghoddusi et al27 method was used to make open apex teeth. In this method, 20% sulfuric acid resorbes root surface irregularity in a manner that may be like the clinical situation.

In a nonvital immature tooth, the canal is often wider apically than coronally and mechanical instrumentation of all dentinal walls is difficult. In addition to this problem, thin roots might make mechanical instrumentation undesirable because it might further weaken the root or result in perforation. Thus before the placement of an apical barrier in open apex teeth, it has been recommended that the canals be medicated with calcium hydroxide for at least one week. The rationale is to disinfect the root canal system and ensure periapical healing.1

Sjogren et al30 found that calcium hydroxide for one week was highly effective in killing root canal flora. Hasselgren et al31 showed that calcium hydroxide can be effective in dissolving necrotic pulp tissue.

However, the complete removal of calcium hydroxide from dentinal walls in these teeth is difficult. In this study, we used light instrumentation and copious irrigation using 0.5% NaOCL for removal of calcium hydroxide. A lower strength of sodium hypochlorite was used because of the danger of extruding NaOCl through the open apex in a clinical situation.1

Several methods have been used to measure leakage around filling materials, such as dye penetration, light microscopic methods, and SEM. The most important disadvantage of these methods is that they can only reveal the presence or absence of leakage, but not the amount.32 Fluid filtration microleakage test is supposed to be a better alternative than dye leakage tests.33 Therefore, the fluid filtration method has been used to measure the leakage of apical plugs in this study.

Hachmeister et al29 found that one-week of calcium hydroxide therapy had no adverse effect on the sealing ability of MTA in 70 days. They concluded that the remnants of calcium hydroxide along the root walls in an open apex tooth do not affect the properties of MTA. Porkaew et al34 who investigated the effects of calcium hydroxide remnants on the sealing ability of gutta-percha and sealer, found a significant decrease in dye leakage in canals that medicated with calcium hydroxide.

CONCLUSIONS

No previous study has evaluated the effect of calcium hydroxide remnants on the seal of the NEC apical plug. According to the results of this study, medication with calcium hydroxide had no adverse effect on the short- and long-term sealing properties of NEC as an apical plug. Further studies focused on the long-term success rate of the NEC apical plug are warranted before it can be recommended for clinical application.

Acknowledgments

This study was supported by the Dental Research Center of Mashhad University of Medical Sciences. The authors wish to thank Dr. H. Esmaili for his advice as a statistician in this study.

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