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Incidence of Post-Operative Pain following a Single-Visit Pulpectomy in Primary Molars Employing Adaptive, Rotary, and Manual Instrumentation: A Randomized Clinical Trial
oleh: Bhagyashree Thakur, Anuj Bhardwaj, Dian Agustin Wahjuningrum, Alexander Maniangat Luke, Krishna Prasad Shetty, Ajinkya M. Pawar, Rodolfo Reda, Marco Seracchiani, Alessio Zanza, Luca Testarelli
Format: | Article |
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Diterbitkan: | MDPI AG 2023-02-01 |
Deskripsi
<i>Background and Objectives.</i> To differentiate the intensity of postoperative pain after primary molar pulpectomy employing manual instrumentation versus two single-file systems with different kinetics (the XP-Endo shaper file with adaptive instrumentation vs. the Kedo-SG blue file with continuous rotation instrumentation). <i>Materials and Methods</i>. This three-arm, single-blind, randomized clinical trial included assessing 75 healthy children between 4 to 9 years who required pulpectomy for primary molars (mandibular first and second). The three groups each had an equal number of children. Children in Group 1 had their teeth instrumented with the XP-endo Shaper, children in Group 2 had their teeth instrumented with the Kedo-SG Blue file, and children in Group 3 had their teeth instrumented manually using K-files. The degree of postoperative pain was measured using a four-point pain scale at 6-, 12-, 24-, 48-, and 72-h following therapy. Each participant’s parent received five flashcards with four faces and a word characterizing each face. The data were analyzed using Kruskal–Wallis and chi-square tests. The level of significance was set to 5%. <i>Results</i>. During the follow-up period, there was a significant difference in postoperative pain intensity between the three groups. The XP-endo shaper was associated with considerably decreased post operative at the 6- and 12-h interval followed by Kedo-SG. The highest post-operative discomfort across the groups was related to the patients who underwent manual instrumentation. <i>Conclusion</i>. In comparison to rotary and manual instrumentation, postoperative pain severity was reduced with adaptive instrumentation.