Abstract : Mesial roots of mandibular molar teeth were prepared with nickel-titanium GT rotary files as recommended by Buchanan and the traditional step-back method with K-files. Observations were done by computerized tomography to compare, on the horizontal plane, the change in shape and position of a root canal before and after procedures. Following canal shaping, post-operative scans were superimposed on the original images at 1.5, 3.0, 4.5, 6.0, and 7.5 mm from the apex of the roots. Changes in canal area, and changes in shape and positions of canal and thickness of the remaining root structure at strategic levels of the root were analyzed.
At 1.5 mm from the apex, the crown-down technique with GT files did not show a significant difference between pre- and post-shaping, but the step-back method with K-files showed a buccal canal wall thinner after the procedure than before. The step-back method showed that the mesial canal wall tended to be thinner than the furcal canal wall.
At 3.0 mm from the apex, with both methods, there was a significant difference, depending on the area, between pre- and post-operation. With the crown-down method the mesio-lingual wall was thinner than the furcal wall. The step-back technique tended to result in thinner extroversion canal walls.
At 4.5 mm from the apex, both techniques resulted in thinner extroversion canal walls. It was not possible to determine which technique gave thinner results.
At 6.0 mm from the apex, the crown-down method produced thinner furcal canal walls. Nevertheless, it was not possible to evaluate which of the furcal canal wall or the mesial (extroversion) canal was thinner.
At 7.5 mm from the apex, both techniques resulted in thinner furcal canal walls than the extroversion walls. The crown-down method showed more efficient filling effect on root canal structure than the step-back method.
The GT rotary file produced good canal shapes in root canals compared to the conventional K-file method.
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