Protocols for cleaning the incisor access cavity contaminated with epoxy resin sealer

Eur J Oral Sci. 2022 Oct;130(5):e12894. doi: 10.1111/eos.12894. Epub 2022 Sep 5.

Abstract

This study compared different methods for cleaning the sealer-contaminated access cavity of upper incisors. After standard endodontic access, the canals of 50 extracted maxillary incisors were chemomechanically prepared and obturated with gutta-percha and epoxy resin sealer. Teeth were randomly assigned to one of five different pulp chamber cleaning protocols (n = 10): air/water spray, ethanol-saturated cotton pellet (CP), ethanol-saturated microbrush reaching the root filling (MB), MB + air polishing (PROPHYflex; KaVo), or MB + etching with 37% phosphoric acid. Each tooth was split and the sealer-covered area of the pulp chamber was determined on images taken before and after cleaning using image analysis software. The sealer-covered area was compared across groups using one-way ANOVA. Greatest mean sealer-covered area reduction was observed for MB + etching (98.0%), MB + air polishing (95.2%), and MB alone (92.8%), yielding a significantly higher sealer-covered area reduction than after air/water spray (8.3%) and ethanol-saturated cotton pellet (53.4%). The upper incisor access cavity is best cleaned with an ethanol-saturated microbrush reaching up to the root filling, followed by air/water spraying and etching. The use of cotton pellets should be discouraged.

Keywords: dental pulp cavity; epoxy resin; incisor; root canal sealant.

MeSH terms

  • Dental Pulp Cavity
  • Epoxy Resins*
  • Ethanol
  • Gutta-Percha
  • Incisor
  • Root Canal Filling Materials*
  • Root Canal Obturation / methods
  • Root Canal Preparation / methods
  • Water

Substances

  • Epoxy Resins
  • Root Canal Filling Materials
  • Water
  • Ethanol
  • Gutta-Percha