Canal filling must be well adapted to the walls of the root canal to prevent bacterial infiltration. Endodontic seals play an essential role in ensuring tightness, without which the canal filling would suffer infiltrations. This study aimed to evaluate the areas occupied by the two components of the canal filling, as well as the sealer/gutta-percha ratio in the root canals of the maxillary central incisors after their filling using the cold lateral condensation technique with gutta-percha. Thirty extracted upper central incisors were rotatably prepared with ProTaper Universal up to F3 and sealed using the cold lateral condensation technique with gutta-percha. After setting the sealer, the roots of the teeth were sectioned perpendicularly to 1 (L1), 3 (L3), 6 (L6), and 8 (L8) mm from the apex. The surface of the sections was analyzed with a Leica EZ4D stereomicroscope and photographed at two magnification orders: 10x and 25x. The areas corresponding to the gutta-percha, sealer, gaps, and root canal were expressed in pixels using the ImageJ software, version 1.50i. The difference in the representation of sealer areas, gutta-percha and voids was statistically significantly different for all four sections analyzed. The best adaptation of the canal obturation was observed in L1 and L3. The gutta-percha area was statistically significantly higher than that of the sealer for the L1, L3, and L6 levels, while the sealer/gutta-percha ratio recorded the lowest value at the L3 level (0, 30) and the highest at its L8 (0.70) level, without registering statistically significant differences regarding the area at the four analyzed levels. The voids were mostly absent or recorded a minimal percentage area (<1%). Cold lateral condensation of gutta-percha has led to a good adaptation of gutta-percha to the root canal wall, with a small amount of sealer, especially to the sections made at 3 mm from the apex. Given the limitations of this study, we noted that the voids were few – observed in the 6 and 8 mm sections – and were negligible in many cases.
Microscopic studies performed on extracted human teeth after their preparation in advance is helpful in a relatively good reestablishment of the treatment steps that have been applied to these teeth, as well as an evaluation of the quality of such treatments. Therefore, we have used stereo- and optical microscopy, highlighting aspects of external morphology, as well as root canal space of an extracted mandibular second premolar, subjected to prosthetic and endodontic treatment. In order to verify some technical errors that might occur during the endodontic and restorative treatment, we tried to appreciate the quality of the root canal filling and cervical defect and access cavity restoration of an extracted premolar #45.Without having the data from clinical records, we concluded that the method used for root canal filling was the warm lateral condensation technic; we also appreciated the quality of the fusion of the gutta-percha cones used, so the introduction of heated spreaders only in the central part of the bunch of cones makes it possible to clearly detect the boundaries between these cones towards the outside of the filling.
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