Palestinian Medical and Pharmaceutical Journal (Pal. Med. Pharm. J.)

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Palestinian Medical and Pharmaceutical Journal (Pal. Med. Pharm. J.) Indexed in Scopus since 2022
CiteScore 1.0
Indexed since 2022
First decision 7 Days
Submission to acceptance 45 Days
Acceptance to publication 14 Days
Acceptance rate 8%

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Original full research article

Knowledge, attitude, and practice regarding deep dentinal caries removal before root canal treatment and restoration among practicing dental surgeons

Published
2024-03-01
Pages
43 - 84
Full text

Keywords

  • Caries Detector Dyes
  • Restoration
  • Root Canal Treatment
  • Caries
  • Disclosing Agents

Abstract

This article aims to determine the knowledge, attitude, and practice regarding Deep Den-tinal Caries Removal before Root Canal Treatment (RCT) and Restoration among practicing dental surgeons. A descriptive cross-sectional study was executed amongst dental surgeons practicing with undergraduate and post-graduate degrees. A Google questionnaire form was developed and distributed, and 111 authentic entries were short-listed. Data obtained from the study were recorded in Microsoft Excel 2007 version, and SPSS version 18.0 was used for statistical analysis. Most dental surgeons who participated in the study practiced for over 15-20 years. Among them, 60% believe in removing dentinal caries before RCT; 83.8% be-lieve in completely removing caries before any restoration, of which only 32.4% use caries-disclosing agents to detect caries. 77.5 % of dentists often encounter cases of RCT failure with incomplete caries removal, and 51.8% believe RCT failure could be due to incomplete caries removal; hence, 83.8% of dentists would recommend complete caries removal to their fellow dentists before RCT. Unnecessary planning of operative tooth intervention makes it go through a lifetime of restorative care through the re-restoration cycle, with additional eco-nomic costs with each appointment and an increased chance of premature tooth loss. Diag-nostic aids combining visual and tactile examinations, radiographs, and disclosing agents are reliable diagnostic techniques for deciding on any operative intervention for infected dentine. If caries are excavated before any endodontic treatment, a considerable amount of chair time is reduced during crown preparation, and the longevity of the prosthesis is increased.

Article history

Received
2023-02-02
Accepted
2023-03-24
Available online
2024-03-01
بحث أصيل كامل

Knowledge, attitude, and practice regarding deep dentinal caries removal before root canal treatment and restoration among practicing dental surgeons

Published
2024-03-01
الصفحات
43 - 84
البحث كاملا

الكلمات الإفتتاحية

  • Caries Detector Dyes
  • Restoration
  • Root Canal Treatment
  • Caries
  • Disclosing Agents

الملخص

This article aims to determine the knowledge, attitude, and practice regarding Deep Den-tinal Caries Removal before Root Canal Treatment (RCT) and Restoration among practicing dental surgeons. A descriptive cross-sectional study was executed amongst dental surgeons practicing with undergraduate and post-graduate degrees. A Google questionnaire form was developed and distributed, and 111 authentic entries were short-listed. Data obtained from the study were recorded in Microsoft Excel 2007 version, and SPSS version 18.0 was used for statistical analysis. Most dental surgeons who participated in the study practiced for over 15-20 years. Among them, 60% believe in removing dentinal caries before RCT; 83.8% be-lieve in completely removing caries before any restoration, of which only 32.4% use caries-disclosing agents to detect caries. 77.5 % of dentists often encounter cases of RCT failure with incomplete caries removal, and 51.8% believe RCT failure could be due to incomplete caries removal; hence, 83.8% of dentists would recommend complete caries removal to their fellow dentists before RCT. Unnecessary planning of operative tooth intervention makes it go through a lifetime of restorative care through the re-restoration cycle, with additional eco-nomic costs with each appointment and an increased chance of premature tooth loss. Diag-nostic aids combining visual and tactile examinations, radiographs, and disclosing agents are reliable diagnostic techniques for deciding on any operative intervention for infected dentine. If caries are excavated before any endodontic treatment, a considerable amount of chair time is reduced during crown preparation, and the longevity of the prosthesis is increased.

Article history

تاريخ التسليم
2023-02-02
تاريخ القبول
2023-03-24
Available online
2024-03-01