Title of article :
Failure of incompletely excavated teeth—A systematic review
Author/Authors :
Schwendicke، نويسنده , , F. and Meyer-Lueckel، نويسنده , , H. and Dِrfer، نويسنده , , C. and Paris، نويسنده , , S.، نويسنده ,
Pages :
12
From page :
569
To page :
580
Abstract :
AbstractObjectives reating deep caries, one- and two-step incomplete caries removal reduce the risk of pulpal exposure. However, it is currently unclear if incompletely excavated teeth fail due to pulpal or rather non-pulpal complications. The present study systematically analysed how incompletely excavated teeth fail, and if certain tooth- or treatment-related factors may influence risk of failure. al studies investigating clinical or radiologic failure after incomplete excavation of deep caries (depth >1/2 dentine thickness) were evaluated. Weighted annual failure rates (AFRs) were used to analyse frequency and mode of failures. Sub-analyses compared risk of failure in different groups of possible influencing factors. s onic databases were screened and studies cross-referenced. Language was restricted to English and German. Grey literature was not evaluated. s dies with a median (Q25/75) follow-up of 24 (12/48) months were included. AFR was 3.8 (1.4/4.4)%. Eleven studies reported pulpal complications being the major reason for failure, and only 2 studies found more non-pulpal than pulpal failures. Sub-analyses found significantly lower risk of failure for teeth after one- compared with two-step excavation (Odds ratio [95% CI] = 0.21 [0.08, 0.55]) and teeth with single- compared with multi-surface cavities (0.33 [0.16, 0.67]). Risk of bias differed widely between studies, and evidence levels were graded as very low. sions incomplete removal of deep caries, pulpal failure was more common. One- compared with two-step excavation reduces risk of failure, and factors like number of restored surfaces seem to but influence failure, but limited evidence permits drawing definitive conclusions. al Significance g evidence indicates that one-step incomplete excavation seems suitable to treat deep caries lesions, and might have advantages compared to two-step incomplete or complete caries removal. However, it is too early to recommend certain clinical strategies.
Keywords :
Incomplete excavation , Failure , Caries removal , Partial excavation , Survival
Journal title :
Astroparticle Physics
Record number :
2039690
Link To Document :
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