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Preserving dentine in minimally invasive access cavities does not strengthen the fracture resistance of restored mandibular molars
Author(s) -
Silva E. J. N. L.,
Lima C. O.,
Barbosa A. F. A.,
Augusto C. M.,
Souza E. M.,
Lopes R. T.,
DeDeus G.,
Versiani M. A.
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
international endodontic journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.988
H-Index - 119
eISSN - 1365-2591
pISSN - 0143-2885
DOI - 10.1111/iej.13487
Subject(s) - molar , dentistry , wilcoxon signed rank test , universal testing machine , crown (dentistry) , orthodontics , pulp (tooth) , tooth fracture , materials science , mann–whitney u test , mathematics , medicine , composite material , statistics , ultimate tensile strength
Aim To evaluate the correlation between the volume of dental hard tissues removed and the fracture resistance of mandibular molar teeth with ultraconservative (UltraAC) or traditional (TradAC) access cavity preparations. Methodology Sixty recently extracted and intact mandibular first molars were scanned in a microcomputed tomographic (micro‐CT) device, anatomically matched and assigned at random to 2 groups ( n  = 30), according to the access cavity type: UltraAC or TradAC. After access preparation, mesial and distal canals were prepared using Reciproc instruments and a new scan was taken. The volumes of pulp chamber and dental hard tissues in each specimen were measured before and after the experimental procedures, and the percentage volume reduction of hard tissues calculated for the entire tooth and for the crown separately. Teeth were then root filled, restored and subjected to fracture resistance tests in an universal testing machine. The force required to fracture was recorded in Newtons (N). The adherence of the variables to a Gaussian curve was verified using a Shapiro–Wilk test. Skewed data were analysed with nonparametric Wilcoxon signed rank or Spearman correlation tests, whilst the normally distributed data were analysed with a dependent samples Student t ‐test. Level of significance was set at 5%. Results Pre‐operatively, no difference was observed between groups regarding the volume of pulp canal space or dental hard tissues ( P  > 0.05). After access preparation, volumes of the removed hard tissues from the entire tooth and from the crown were significantly greater in teeth prepared with TradAC than with UltraAC ( P  < 0.05). No significant difference was observed in the fracture resistance values between TradAC (902.9 ± 347.8 N) and UltraAC (948.7 ± 405.7 N) groups ( P  = 0.975). The Spearman test was unable to identify a correlation between fracture resistance and percentage volume of removed dental hard tissues in the entire root ( P  = 0.525, r  = −0.084) or only in the crown ( P  = 0.152, r  = −0.187). Conclusion The volume of hard dental tissues removed, although greater in teeth with TradAC compared to UltraAC, did not correlate with the fracture resistance results, indicating that a minimally invasive access cavity did not increase the resistance of restored mandibular first molars to fracture.

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