Assessment of geometrical characteristics of dental endodontic micro-instruments utilizing X-ray micro computed tomography

Authors

  • Youssef S. Al Jabbari King Saud University; College of Dentistry
  • Peter Tsakiridis University of Athens; School of Dentistry; Department of Biomaterials
  • George Eliades University of Athens; School of Dentistry; Department of Biomaterials
  • Solaiman M. Al-Hadlaq King Saud University; College of Dentistry
  • Spiros Zinelis University of Athens; School of Dentistry; Department of Biomaterials

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1590/S1678-77572012000600011

Keywords:

X-ray microtomography, Nickel, Titanium, Dental instruments

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to quantify the surface area, volume and specific surface area of endodontic files employing quantitative X-ray micro computed tomography (mXCT). MATERIAL AND METHODS: Three sets (six files each) of the Flex-Master Ni-Ti system (Nº 20, 25 and 30, taper .04) were utilized in this study. The files were scanned by mXCT. The surface area and volume of all files were determined from the cutting tip up to 16 mm. The data from the surface area, volume and specific area were statistically evaluated using the one-way ANOVA and SNK multiple comparison tests at α=0.05, employing the file size as a discriminating variable. The correlation between the surface area and volume with nominal ISO sizes were tested employing linear regression analysis. RESULTS: The surface area and volume of Nº 30 files showed the highest value followed by Nº 25 and Nº 20 and the differences were statistically significant. The Nº 20 files showed a significantly higher specific surface area compared to Nº 25 and Nº 30. The increase in surface and volume towards higher file sizes follows a linear relationship with the nominal ISO sizes (r²=0.930 for surface area and r²=0.974 for volume respectively). Results indicated that the surface area and volume demonstrated an almost linear increase while the specific surface area exhibited an abrupt decrease towards higher sizes. CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrates that mXCT can be effectively applied to discriminate very small differences in the geometrical features of endodontic micro-instruments, while providing quantitative information for their geometrical properties.

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Published

2012-12-01

Issue

Section

Original Articles

How to Cite

Assessment of geometrical characteristics of dental endodontic micro-instruments utilizing X-ray micro computed tomography . (2012). Journal of Applied Oral Science, 20(6), 655-660. https://doi.org/10.1590/S1678-77572012000600011