A 10-year Follow-up Study of 119 Teeth Treated with Apical Surgery and Root-end Filling with Mineral Trioxide Aggregate

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A 10-year Follow-up Study of 119 Teeth Treated with Apical Surgery and Root-end Filling with Mineral Trioxide Aggregate. / von Arx, Thomas; Jensen, Simon S; Janner, Simone F M; Hänni, Stefan; Bornstein, Michael M.

In: Journal of Endodontics, Vol. 45, No. 4, 2019, p. 394-401.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

von Arx, T, Jensen, SS, Janner, SFM, Hänni, S & Bornstein, MM 2019, 'A 10-year Follow-up Study of 119 Teeth Treated with Apical Surgery and Root-end Filling with Mineral Trioxide Aggregate', Journal of Endodontics, vol. 45, no. 4, pp. 394-401. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.joen.2018.12.015

APA

von Arx, T., Jensen, S. S., Janner, S. F. M., Hänni, S., & Bornstein, M. M. (2019). A 10-year Follow-up Study of 119 Teeth Treated with Apical Surgery and Root-end Filling with Mineral Trioxide Aggregate. Journal of Endodontics, 45(4), 394-401. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.joen.2018.12.015

Vancouver

von Arx T, Jensen SS, Janner SFM, Hänni S, Bornstein MM. A 10-year Follow-up Study of 119 Teeth Treated with Apical Surgery and Root-end Filling with Mineral Trioxide Aggregate. Journal of Endodontics. 2019;45(4):394-401. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.joen.2018.12.015

Author

von Arx, Thomas ; Jensen, Simon S ; Janner, Simone F M ; Hänni, Stefan ; Bornstein, Michael M. / A 10-year Follow-up Study of 119 Teeth Treated with Apical Surgery and Root-end Filling with Mineral Trioxide Aggregate. In: Journal of Endodontics. 2019 ; Vol. 45, No. 4. pp. 394-401.

Bibtex

@article{fbffcbd34a5e46508e4dbaa4bef8ef45,
title = "A 10-year Follow-up Study of 119 Teeth Treated with Apical Surgery and Root-end Filling with Mineral Trioxide Aggregate",
abstract = "INTRODUCTION: The objective of this clinical study was to assess the long-term outcome (clinical signs/symptoms and radiographic healing) of teeth treated with apical surgery and mineral trioxide aggregate (MTA) for root-end filling.METHODS: One hundred ninety-five patients were recalled 1, 5, and 10 years after apical surgery for clinical and radiographic examinations. Three calibrated observers evaluated the periapical radiographs independently. The evolution of the cases over time was analyzed. Healing classification of teeth was divided into {"}healed{"} versus {"}not healed{"} teeth using well-established clinical and radiographic healing criteria. The potential influence of sex, age, type of treated tooth, type of MTA, and first-time versus repeat surgery on healing outcome was statistically analyzed.RESULTS: The inception cohort included 195 teeth. The dropout rate after 10 years amounted to 39% (n = 76). Of the 119 teeth available for the 10-year analysis, 97 teeth were classified as healed (81.5%). No significant differences were found with regard to the rate of healed cases for the subcategories of the parameters of age, sex, type of MTA, and first-time or repeat surgery. Concerning the type of treated tooth, the rate of healed maxillary molars (95.2%) differed significantly (P = .035) from the rate of healed maxillary premolars (66.7%). The predictive value of the cases classified as healed at 1 year and remaining so over the 10-year observation period was 86.8%.CONCLUSIONS: This 10-year follow-up study of teeth treated with apical surgery and MTA as root-end filling material showed an acceptable rate of healed cases. Many of the lost teeth had been extracted because of longitudinal root fractures during the observation period.",
author = "{von Arx}, Thomas and Jensen, {Simon S} and Janner, {Simone F M} and Stefan H{\"a}nni and Bornstein, {Michael M.}",
note = "Copyright {\textcopyright} 2019 American Association of Endodontists. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.",
year = "2019",
doi = "10.1016/j.joen.2018.12.015",
language = "English",
volume = "45",
pages = "394--401",
journal = "Journal of Endodontics",
issn = "0099-2399",
publisher = "Elsevier",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A 10-year Follow-up Study of 119 Teeth Treated with Apical Surgery and Root-end Filling with Mineral Trioxide Aggregate

AU - von Arx, Thomas

AU - Jensen, Simon S

AU - Janner, Simone F M

AU - Hänni, Stefan

AU - Bornstein, Michael M.

N1 - Copyright © 2019 American Association of Endodontists. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - INTRODUCTION: The objective of this clinical study was to assess the long-term outcome (clinical signs/symptoms and radiographic healing) of teeth treated with apical surgery and mineral trioxide aggregate (MTA) for root-end filling.METHODS: One hundred ninety-five patients were recalled 1, 5, and 10 years after apical surgery for clinical and radiographic examinations. Three calibrated observers evaluated the periapical radiographs independently. The evolution of the cases over time was analyzed. Healing classification of teeth was divided into "healed" versus "not healed" teeth using well-established clinical and radiographic healing criteria. The potential influence of sex, age, type of treated tooth, type of MTA, and first-time versus repeat surgery on healing outcome was statistically analyzed.RESULTS: The inception cohort included 195 teeth. The dropout rate after 10 years amounted to 39% (n = 76). Of the 119 teeth available for the 10-year analysis, 97 teeth were classified as healed (81.5%). No significant differences were found with regard to the rate of healed cases for the subcategories of the parameters of age, sex, type of MTA, and first-time or repeat surgery. Concerning the type of treated tooth, the rate of healed maxillary molars (95.2%) differed significantly (P = .035) from the rate of healed maxillary premolars (66.7%). The predictive value of the cases classified as healed at 1 year and remaining so over the 10-year observation period was 86.8%.CONCLUSIONS: This 10-year follow-up study of teeth treated with apical surgery and MTA as root-end filling material showed an acceptable rate of healed cases. Many of the lost teeth had been extracted because of longitudinal root fractures during the observation period.

AB - INTRODUCTION: The objective of this clinical study was to assess the long-term outcome (clinical signs/symptoms and radiographic healing) of teeth treated with apical surgery and mineral trioxide aggregate (MTA) for root-end filling.METHODS: One hundred ninety-five patients were recalled 1, 5, and 10 years after apical surgery for clinical and radiographic examinations. Three calibrated observers evaluated the periapical radiographs independently. The evolution of the cases over time was analyzed. Healing classification of teeth was divided into "healed" versus "not healed" teeth using well-established clinical and radiographic healing criteria. The potential influence of sex, age, type of treated tooth, type of MTA, and first-time versus repeat surgery on healing outcome was statistically analyzed.RESULTS: The inception cohort included 195 teeth. The dropout rate after 10 years amounted to 39% (n = 76). Of the 119 teeth available for the 10-year analysis, 97 teeth were classified as healed (81.5%). No significant differences were found with regard to the rate of healed cases for the subcategories of the parameters of age, sex, type of MTA, and first-time or repeat surgery. Concerning the type of treated tooth, the rate of healed maxillary molars (95.2%) differed significantly (P = .035) from the rate of healed maxillary premolars (66.7%). The predictive value of the cases classified as healed at 1 year and remaining so over the 10-year observation period was 86.8%.CONCLUSIONS: This 10-year follow-up study of teeth treated with apical surgery and MTA as root-end filling material showed an acceptable rate of healed cases. Many of the lost teeth had been extracted because of longitudinal root fractures during the observation period.

U2 - 10.1016/j.joen.2018.12.015

DO - 10.1016/j.joen.2018.12.015

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 30827766

VL - 45

SP - 394

EP - 401

JO - Journal of Endodontics

JF - Journal of Endodontics

SN - 0099-2399

IS - 4

ER -

ID: 216250093