Nonsurgical root canal therapy treatment with apparent indications for root-end surgery
- PMID: 9768425
- DOI: 10.1016/s1079-2104(98)90182-2
Nonsurgical root canal therapy treatment with apparent indications for root-end surgery
Abstract
The recent introduction of the surgical microscope to the practice of endodontics, especially for surgery, has allowed clearer visualization of the periapex during root-end resection and filling. However, despite this and other technologic advances, it has not been demonstrated that in the absence of thorough canal debridement the success rate of periapical surgery has improved over the 50% to 60% demonstrated in most long-term prognosis studies. Therefore it remains important to fully instrument and obturate the root canal system with conventional therapy before surgery is considered; this considerably improves the long-term prognosis. Each of the case reports in this article involves a situation in which conventional treatment was performed when a surgical approach might have been considered as the treatment of choice. Surgery should not be considered to be the primary treatment when root canal treatment or retreatment may be readily achieved. Indeed, the operating microscope and other technical aids will probably allow more cases to be treated and retreated conventionally that might otherwise have required surgical intervention.
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