The purpose of our study is to characterize the composition of the hard and soft tissues present after regenerative endodontic procedures in root canals of teeth previously diagnosed with the need for extraction for orthodontic treatment and incomplete root formation. Although the protocol addressed in this study is currently being used in clinical practice, there are no prospective clinical trials investigating its efficacy in stimulating continued root development and the nature of the newly formed tissues.
Twenty subjects with permanent bilateral premolar teeth with incomplete root development and scheduled for extraction due to orthodontic requirement will be treated with a regeneration protocol. Teeth (n=20/group) will be extracted at 3 months following the regenerative protocol or the pulpectomy control. The protocol relies on disinfection of the canal space by copious irrigation with common endodontic irrigants and placement of a triple antibiotic paste (regenerative group) or calcium hydroxide dressing (control group) to disinfect the root for a period of one month. In each patient, both treatment arms will be performed. Thus, each treatment sample will have a contralateral matching control (paired designs). At the end of one month, the intracanal medicaments (triple antibiotic paste) is irrigated out of the canal and a blood clot is stimulated in the canal with the aid of endodontic files that are introduced into the periapical tissues; this blood clot will serve as a scaffold for tissue proliferation within the canal. The regenerative treatment tooth is then restored to prevent bacteria from the oral cavity from re-contaminating the canal space. For the contralateral control tooth, the medication will remain in the tooth until the extraction date. The subjects in this study will have the treated teeth extracted at 3 months after initial treatment. The extracted teeth from each study participant will be placed in storage medium until Immunohistochemical analysis with antibodies to characterize the tissue/cells within the canal.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE
Regenerative Root Canal Therapy using Triple Antibiotic Paste study drug
Endodontic RTC with no study drug
University of Texas Health Science Center
San Antonio, Texas, United States
Histological identification of the mineralized tissue at the apical third of the root and the adherent cellular layer.
Although we predict histological identification of dentin/odontoblasts (due to the proximity of the apical papilla and associated SCAP stem cells) using our scanning laser confocal microscopy system, our methods are sufficiently sensitive to permit identification of bone/osteoblasts and cementum/cementoblasts as alternative hypotheses.
Time frame: Following tooth extraction at the 3 month followup visit. Correlation of all data collected from the extracted teeth will occur at the completion of the study at year 5.
Whether stem cells enter the canal space when bleeding is stimulated through manipulation of the apical papilla.
This secondary outcome measure will be conducted by measuring markers of stem cells prior to and after the formation of the blood clot. We predict that evoking bleeding into the root canal system will increase the delivery of mesenchymal stem cells.
Time frame: Canal bleeding is evoked during the second treatment visit thirty days following the first treatment. Blood collected by paper points will be saved till the end of the study (year 5) for analysis.
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