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Medicina (Kaunas, Lithuania) May 2024: Sealant application is a proven method to prevent occlusal caries; however, long-term studies on this topic are scarce. This study aimed to assess the survival rate...
: Sealant application is a proven method to prevent occlusal caries; however, long-term studies on this topic are scarce. This study aimed to assess the survival rate and clinical effectiveness of glass ionomer cement (GIC) and resin-based sealants (RBSs) on second permanent molars over a long-term follow-up period. Sixteen patients aged 11-13 years with all four completely erupted permanent second molars were enrolled in the study. All patients attended 1-year and 3-year follow-ups; however, one participant did not respond after 10 years and was excluded from the final analyses. The oral health status evaluation was based on WHO criteria. A total of 32 teeth received an RBS (Clinpro), and a further 32 teeth were sealed with GIC (Fuji IX). The sealant retention was determined according to the Kilpatrick criteria after 1 year, 3 years, and 10 years, respectively. Statistical analysis included a chi-square test, the Kaplan-Meier method, and the Cox proportional hazard model. : At baseline, seven boys and eight girls participated in the study, with a mean age of 12.3 ± 0.9 years. The 1-year follow-up results revealed that 90% of the RBSs and 43.3% of the GIC sealants were completely retained, and no caries lesions were recorded ( = 0.01). The 3-year follow-up results showed that 23.3% of the RBSs and 0% of the GIC sealants demonstrated complete retention ( = 0.034). Moreover, 10.0% of the occlusal surfaces in the RBS group and 13.3% of the occlusal surfaces in the GIC group were filled ( > 0.05). A total of 6.7% of the RBSs showed complete retention. One-third of the sealed teeth (30.0% of the teeth sealed with RBSs and 36.7% of teeth applied with GIC) were filled after 10 years. The Kaplan-Meier analysis demonstrated a higher survival rate in the RBS group when compared with the GIC over the entire follow-up period ( = 0.001). : Although the survival rate of RBSs was higher than GIC sealants, their effectiveness in preventing fissure caries in permanent second molars did not differ significantly over a 10-year follow-up.
Topics: Humans; Glass Ionomer Cements; Female; Male; Child; Follow-Up Studies; Pit and Fissure Sealants; Adolescent; Dental Caries; Molar; Survival Analysis; Composite Resins; Resin Cements
PubMed: 38792939
DOI: 10.3390/medicina60050756 -
Medicina (Kaunas, Lithuania) Apr 2024: The therapeutic management of carious lesions remains a significant focus for researchers, given their persistently high prevalence despite being largely preventable....
: The therapeutic management of carious lesions remains a significant focus for researchers, given their persistently high prevalence despite being largely preventable. This study aimed to compare the effectiveness of a composite resin-based sealant material in halting extended non-cavitated dentin carious lesions when used therapeutically versus preventively on caries-free teeth over a period of twelve months. : out of the 236 children examined, 45 were excluded from the study due to non-compliance with the inclusion criteria. Thus, the study included 191 children aged 10-12 years, and 764 molars in total. : among these molars, 171 were caries-free (ICDAS II code 0), forming the Control group, while 180 molars were classified with an ICDAS II score of 3, forming the Study group. All molars were sealed and evaluated at 6- and 12-month follow-up intervals. Both intervals revealed statistically significant differences ( < 0.05) in sealant retention and carious lesion development between sound (ICDAS code 0) and decayed (ICDAS code 3) teeth. : the findings did not support the effectiveness of sealants in halting non-cavitated dentin carious lesions classified as ICDAS II with code 3 compared to their preventive application in sound teeth classified as ICDAS II with code 0.
Topics: Humans; Dental Caries; Child; Pit and Fissure Sealants; Female; Male; Follow-Up Studies; Composite Resins; Molar; Treatment Outcome
PubMed: 38792917
DOI: 10.3390/medicina60050734 -
Cureus Apr 2024Introduction Anxiety is an emotion representing apprehension towards an unknown stimulus or situation. Rubber dam application during dental procedures in children makes...
Introduction Anxiety is an emotion representing apprehension towards an unknown stimulus or situation. Rubber dam application during dental procedures in children makes the treatment more comfortable and acceptable as it gives them a psychological feeling that treatment is being carried out outside the oral cavity. The prime objective of this study was to evaluate and compare physiological parameters, which include pulse rate, arterial oxygen saturation level, blood pressure, and respiratory rate before and after rubber dam isolation. Material and methods The study consisted of 30 children patients of 7-10 years, comprised of 14 females and 16 males with a mean age of 8.15 ± 0.93 years. The study was a 'split mouth' clinical design study, where 60 sites in 30 patients (two sites in each patient) were used. The selected sites were divided into two groups by a convenience sampling method and were categorized as Group-I (control group - 30 sites were treated with pit and fissure sealants under cotton roll and saliva ejectors on mandibular right permanent first molar) and Group-II (study group - 30 sites were treated with pit and fissure sealants underrubber dam isolation on mandibular left permanent first molar). Results Rubber dam application reduced different physiological parameters of stress such as pulse rate, systolic and diastolic blood pressure, and respiratory rate at different intervals from the baseline values. Rubber dam and cotton roll applications have no significant effects on oxygen saturation levels at different intervals in healthy individuals. From statistical analysis, it was evident that a statistically significant difference was evident between the control and experimental groups (P value < 0.005). Conclusion It is confirmed in this study that rubber dam reduces different physiologic parameters of stress. After the application of the rubber dam, children's pulse rate, systolic and diastolic blood pressure, and respiratory rate were reduced. Clinical significance The study highlights the imperative role of rubber dam isolation in improving dental and medical effectiveness. In addendum to this, our research promotes the clinical use of rubber dams in pediatric dentistry.
PubMed: 38770463
DOI: 10.7759/cureus.58615 -
The Journal of Clinical Pediatric... May 2024Patients being reported for vitamin D deficiency (VDD) are increasing, particularly among the children and adolescents. This study aims to manifest the clinical and...
Patients being reported for vitamin D deficiency (VDD) are increasing, particularly among the children and adolescents. This study aims to manifest the clinical and dental evaluations of a child with VDD, referred to the dental office. A 10-year-old British Asian boy was referred to the paediatric specialist dentistry clinic by the general dentist for dental management. The medical history depicted that the patient was diagnosed with VDD, secondary hyperparathyroidism and delayed growth. Moreover, his mother had the VDD during pregnancy. The patient was breast fed and had rickets in infancy. He was prescribed vitamin D supplements at the age of 16 months. He had received multiple dental treatments under local anaesthesia but with limited cooperation. Clinical examination revealed that the patient had chronological enamel hypoplasia shown as bands at the occlusal third on specific teeth. Suboptimal hygiene with general plaque induced gingivitis, dental caries in permanent and primary teeth, and delayed the teeth eruption. Preventions included appropriate oral hygiene and dietary advice, fluoride varnish application and fissure sealant placement. The treatments included anterior direct composite restoration, posterior composite restoration, stainless steel crowns and extractions. Thorough medical history is essential to understand the underlying causes of dental defects. Early dental intervention can restore the patient appearance and function and prevent further dental damage.
Topics: Humans; Male; Dental Enamel Hypoplasia; Child; Vitamin D Deficiency; Hyperparathyroidism, Secondary; Dental Caries; Pit and Fissure Sealants; Growth Disorders; Crowns; Rickets; Gingivitis; Pregnancy; Dental Restoration, Permanent; Female; Tooth Extraction
PubMed: 38755997
DOI: 10.22514/jocpd.2024.072 -
Brazilian Oral Research 2024The aim of this study was to identify and analyze the characteristics of the 100 most cited articles about dental sealants (DS) in dentistry. In September 2023, a search...
The aim of this study was to identify and analyze the characteristics of the 100 most cited articles about dental sealants (DS) in dentistry. In September 2023, a search was performed in the Web of Science Core Collection (WoS-CC) database. The following information was extracted from each article: number and density of citations, year of publication, authorship, journal, impact factor, keywords, study design, theme, continent, country, and institution. The citations of the WoS-CC were compared with those of the Scopus and Google Scholar databases. The VOSviewer software was used to generate collaborative networks. The number of citations ranged from 33 to 205. The articles were published between 1961 and 2016. Buonocore MG (7%) was the most prominent author among the most cited. The Journal of the American Dental Association was the most frequent journal (25%) and Journal of Dental Research (7.6) had the highest impact factor. Most studies had interventional (41%) and laboratory (31%) designs, mainly addressing DS effectiveness in the prevention and control of dental caries (86%). There was a predominance of publications from North America (46%) and the USA was the country with the highest number of articles (44%). The most frequent institutions were the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (USA) and the University of Rochester (USA) (6% each). "Retention" was the most frequent keyword. In conclusion, the 100 most cited articles were mostly interventional and laboratory studies, addressing the retention and efficacy of DS. Most of the articles were concentrated in North America and Europe, demonstrating a little collaboration from other continents.
Topics: Bibliometrics; Pit and Fissure Sealants; Humans; Dental Research; Journal Impact Factor; Periodicals as Topic; Dental Caries; Dentistry
PubMed: 38747831
DOI: 10.1590/1807-3107bor-2024.vol38.0044 -
BMC Oral Health May 2024Deep learning, as an artificial intelligence method has been proved to be powerful in analyzing images. The purpose of this study is to construct a deep learning-based...
BACKGROUND
Deep learning, as an artificial intelligence method has been proved to be powerful in analyzing images. The purpose of this study is to construct a deep learning-based model (ToothNet) for the simultaneous detection of dental caries and fissure sealants in intraoral photos.
METHODS
A total of 1020 intraoral photos were collected from 762 volunteers. Teeth, caries and sealants were annotated by two endodontists using the LabelMe tool. ToothNet was developed by modifying the YOLOX framework for simultaneous detection of caries and fissure sealants. The area under curve (AUC) in the receiver operating characteristic curve (ROC) and free-response ROC (FROC) curves were used to evaluate model performance in the following aspects: (i) classification accuracy of detecting dental caries and fissure sealants from a photograph (image-level); and (ii) localization accuracy of the locations of predicted dental caries and fissure sealants (tooth-level). The performance of ToothNet and dentist with 1year of experience (1-year dentist) were compared at tooth-level and image-level using Wilcoxon test and DeLong test.
RESULTS
At the image level, ToothNet achieved an AUC of 0.925 (95% CI, 0.880-0.958) for caries detection and 0.902 (95% CI, 0.853-0.940) for sealant detection. At the tooth level, with a confidence threshold of 0.5, the sensitivity, precision, and F1-score for caries detection were 0.807, 0.814, and 0.810, respectively. For fissure sealant detection, the values were 0.714, 0.750, and 0.731. Compared with ToothNet, the 1-year dentist had a lower F1 value (0.599, p < 0.0001) and AUC (0.749, p < 0.0001) in caries detection, and a lower F1 value (0.727, p = 0.023) and similar AUC (0.829, p = 0.154) in sealant detection.
CONCLUSIONS
The proposed deep learning model achieved multi-task simultaneous detection in intraoral photos and showed good performance in the detection of dental caries and fissure sealants. Compared with 1-year dentist, the model has advantages in caries detection and is equivalent in fissure sealants detection.
Topics: Humans; Dental Caries; Pit and Fissure Sealants; Deep Learning; Pilot Projects; Photography, Dental; Adult; Male; Female
PubMed: 38735954
DOI: 10.1186/s12903-024-04254-1 -
Journal of Dental Research Jul 2024This study aimed to compare the clinical effectiveness of resin-based fissure sealants (FS) and fluoride varnish (FV) in children at high caries risk. A practice-based... (Randomized Controlled Trial)
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study
This study aimed to compare the clinical effectiveness of resin-based fissure sealants (FS) and fluoride varnish (FV) in children at high caries risk. A practice-based split-mouth randomized clinical trial was conducted at 9 Public Dental Service (PDS) clinics in Norway. In total, 409 children age 6 to 10 y at high caries risk (dmft > 0) meeting inclusion criteria were recruited by dentists and dental hygienists during routine examination. Eligibility criteria were 2 fully erupted first permanent molars (FPMs) in the same jaw, with sound occlusal surfaces or with initial caries. Participation was voluntary, caregivers and eligible children were informed about the study, and written parental consent was obtained. FS and FV were randomly applied on contralateral FPMs in the same jaw, with each participant serving as their own control. FS was applied at baseline and thereafter maintained according to clinicians' conventional procedures, whereas FV was applied at baseline, 6 mo, and 12 mo. The study outcome was success, with no need for invasive treatment (caries control), while failure was defined as dentin carious lesion or restoration. Two-level mixed-effects logistic regression analysis was used to compare FS and FV groups. Of 409 recruited children, 369 (90%) children/tooth pairs were examined after 36 mo. Intention-to-treat analysis showed 94.1% adjusted predicted probability (PP) of success (95% confidence interval [CI] 91.7 to 96.4) in the FS group and 89.6% PP (95% CI 86.5 to 92.7) in the FV group. In the adjusted analysis, the FV group had a lower OR for success compared with the FS group (OR 0.54, 95% CI 0.24 to 0.87). In the population studied, the clinical effectiveness of FS was statistically significantly higher compared with FV but below the estimated minimal clinically important difference of 10%.
Topics: Humans; Pit and Fissure Sealants; Fluorides, Topical; Dental Caries; Male; Female; Child; Cariostatic Agents; Treatment Outcome; Molar
PubMed: 38716723
DOI: 10.1177/00220345241248630 -
Contemporary Clinical Dentistry 2024Silver diamine fluoride (SDF) is a topical treatment for carious lesions and a primary preventative for newly exposed high-risk surfaces such as fissures and roots in...
INTRODUCTION
Silver diamine fluoride (SDF) is a topical treatment for carious lesions and a primary preventative for newly exposed high-risk surfaces such as fissures and roots in the first molars. Using potassium iodide (KI) after applying SDF has been recommended as a way of reducing the severity of black staining, as well as preserving its antibacterial effect useful in deep caries.
OBJECTIVE
The objective of this research was to compare the antibacterial effect of SDF, with and without KI, on (. ) and dental biofilm.
METHODS
The antibacterial effects of SDF, KI, and the combination of both were measured using three different techniques (inhibition halo, minimum inhibitory effect [MIE], and colony-forming unit [CFU], testing).
RESULTS
The results were then subjected to statistical analysis. Analyzed by means of the Kruskal-Wallis statistical test, the inhibition halos yielded a value of = 0.3309. Using the MIE test, only the SDF treatment produced an antibacterial effect, at 10%, compared to the KI group, with = 0.001. Finally, the CFU test revealed a total absence of colonies for all three reagents. All three substances analyzed achieved total inhibition of . . SDF is effective even in its minimal commercial concentration. Its antibacterial capacity decreases with the addition of KI.
CONCLUSIONS
The three substances analyzed at their maximum concentrations exhibited an antibacterial effect against . , resulting in total inhibition.
PubMed: 38707672
DOI: 10.4103/ccd.ccd_393_23 -
Cureus Mar 2024Since the beginning of modern endodontics, there have been many concepts, strategies, and techniques for root canal preparation. A mind-boggling variety of files have...
BACKGROUND
Since the beginning of modern endodontics, there have been many concepts, strategies, and techniques for root canal preparation. A mind-boggling variety of files have developed for negotiating and shaping them throughout the years. Today's most secure, most effective, and simplest file system combines the most reliable design elements of the past with the latest technological advances to create the most effective file system. So, the need for the study is to evaluate the fracture strength of tooth roots following canal preparation by three rotary file systems: ProTaper Universal file system (Dentsply, USA), ProTaper Next file system (Dentsply Sirona USA), and Neolix A1 nickel-titanium (NiTi) file system (Orikam Healthcare India Pvt Ltd., New Delhi, India).
METHOD
Ninety human mandibular molars were selected for the study. Inclusion criteria include human mandibular first and second molars and teeth removed for routine clinical reasons, and intact apices were selected, excluding cases with root surface caries, root surface fissures, teeth with immature root apex, mesial canal fusion, extremely short roots, thin roots, or curved roots. All teeth were preserved in a solution of 10% neutral buffered formalin for two weeks and then transferred to distilled water for examination. The teeth were randomly divided into three groups. Access cavities were created, and working lengths were determined. Groups 1, 2, and 3 underwent shaping using ProTaper Universal, ProTaper Next, and Neolix A1 (NiTi) file systems, respectively, following guidelines. Canals were irrigated with sodium hypochlorite and ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) and were obturated up to the mid-root region with AH Plus sealer. To facilitate fracture testing, obturation was performed to distribute the load from the spreader to the canal wall. The EndoSequence and Quick-Fill obturation system were utilized to fill the apical half of the canal with gutta-percha material. After obturation, the distal root of each tooth was cut, while the mesial root was securely positioned in a putty material. A universal testing machine was employed for the fracture tests, operating at a cross-head speed of 1 mm/min. The machine was equipped with a D11 hand spreader tip, which was inserted into the root canal to make contact with the gutta-percha. Gradual force was applied to the root canal until a fracture occurred, at which point the force application was stopped. The amount of force required to cause the fracture was measured in newtons. Data were collected and recorded using IBM SPSS Statistics for Windows, Version 17.0 (Released 2008; IBM Corp., Armonk, New York, United States) and then transferred to Microsoft Excel for analysis. Descriptive statistics, mean, and standard deviation were used for continuous data. The fracture resistance of dental roots treated with three types of files was compared using a one-way ANOVA. Graphs were generated using Excel and Word. A significance level of p<0.01 was chosen.
RESULT
ANOVA indicated significant differences in mean fracture resistance: Neolix A1 (NiTi) (95.3 N) > NEXT (91.0 N) > universal (86.6 N), with a p-value of 0.004 (<0.001), confirming statistical significance.
CONCLUSION
The study concludes that the canal instrumented with Neolix A1 (NiTi) exhibits higher fracture resistance after canal instrumentation compared to ProTaper Next and ProTaper Universal.
PubMed: 38690448
DOI: 10.7759/cureus.57302 -
The Saudi Dental Journal Apr 2024Dental general anesthesia (DGA) can be a preferred approach for treating children with special health needs (CSHCN). It has many benefits, most importantly, the support...
Dental general anesthesia (DGA) can be a preferred approach for treating children with special health needs (CSHCN). It has many benefits, most importantly, the support of the anesthesia team to control the medical status and treat the patient safely. The aim of this study was to evaluate the dental treatment provided to (CSHCN) under (DGA) in a tertiary-care hospital. Moreover, to compare the dental procedures between different medical conditions. This retrospective study involves a sample of 730 children aged between (1-16 years) with complex medical conditions treated under DGA between January 2009 until April 2022. The results show that 4.93 % of these patients had DGA twice. For those children who had DGA only once, the most frequent medical conditions were neuro-developmental disorders (31.8 %), pediatric oncology (17.4 %), and behavioral disorders (autism ADHD, etc) (15.1 %). The average age was 6.9 years; almost half were preschool children (4-6 years old, 48.41 %) followed by younger school children (7-9 years old, 28.82 %). The most common dental procedures done were extractions followed by restorative procedures. The use of fissure sealant was significantly higher in neuro-developmental and behavioral disabilities patients than other medical conditions.
PubMed: 38690379
DOI: 10.1016/j.sdentj.2024.01.003