Influence of occlusal surface reduction on post endodontic pain following instrumentation and obturation: A randomized double blinded clinical study

Objective: The purpose of this randomized clinical study was to investigate the influence of occlusal surface reduction on postendodontic pain. Methodology: Sixty patients were included with a diagnosis of acute irreversible pulpitis and acute apical periodontitis and divided randomly into two group...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of conservative dentistry and endodontics Vol. 27; no. 9; pp. 902 - 907
Main Authors Manigandan, Kuzhanchinathan, Karthick, Soundararajan, Rajendran, Mathan Rajan, Gopal, Kalaiselvam Rajeswari
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 01.09.2024
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Summary:Objective: The purpose of this randomized clinical study was to investigate the influence of occlusal surface reduction on postendodontic pain. Methodology: Sixty patients were included with a diagnosis of acute irreversible pulpitis and acute apical periodontitis and divided randomly into two groups. In the intervention group, occlusal surfaces were reduced and left intact in the control group. Postoperative pain was evaluated at the 6 th , 12 th , 24 th , and 48 th h after the root canal instrumentation and 6 th and 12 th h following obturation using visual analog scale. Data were evaluated using the Chi-square test, t -test, Friedman test, Mann–Whitney U -test, and Wilcoxon rank test. Results: Postoperative pain levels in both groups were reduced significantly over the time period evaluated, however, between the two groups, there was no difference evident. Conclusion: Occlusal surface reduction did not influence the pain following root canal instrumentation and obturation.
ISSN:2950-4716
2950-4708
DOI:10.4103/JCDE.JCDE_325_24