vivo antibacterial efficacy of ultrasound after hand and rotary instrumentation in human mandibular molars

Abstract

Abstract The purpose of this prospective, randomized, singleblind study was to compare the in vivo antibacterial efficacy of a hand/rotary technique versus a hand/ rotary/ultrasound technique in mesial root canals of necrotic mandibular molars. The hand/rotary group consisted of 16 mesial roots prepared with a hand/ rotary technique. The hand/rotary/ultrasound group consisted of 15 mesial roots prepared similarly, followed by 1 minute of ultrasonic irrigation per canal with an ultrasonic needle in a MiniEndo unit and 15 mL/canal of 6.0% sodium hypochlorite. Canals were sampled before and after instrumentation and after 1 minute of ultrasonic irrigation. Samples were incubated anaerobically on reduced blood agar for 7 days at 37°C, and colony-forming units (CFUs) were counted. The addition of 1 minute of ultrasonic irrigation resulted in significant (p ϭ .0006) reduction in CFU count and positive cultures (p ϭ .0047). Logistic regression analysis indicated the addition of ultrasonic irrigation was 7 times more likely to yield a negative culture. (J Endo

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