This is a clinical trial to assess the treatment outcomes of pulpotomy in vital primary molars diagnosed with symptomatic irreversible pulpitis. Pulpotomy is a more conservative treatment option over the conventional pulpectomy treatment. Compared to pulpectomy, pulpotomy is a technically simpler procedure, less time consuming, easier for young patients to tolerate, and retains the proprioceptive sensation of the tooth - all important advantages when treating young children.
Background: Pulpectomy continues to be the standard treatment recommendation for management of vital primary molars diagnosed with symptomatic irreversible pulpitis. The recent decade has seen a paradigm shift in the treatment concepts of how vital mature permanent molars diagnosed with irreversible pulpitis can be more conservatively managed using vital pulp therapy techniques like pulpotomy. However, despite emerging evidence indicating similarities between primary and permanent tooth pulp response to dental caries, there is limited research on whether pulpotomy can be similarly used as a definitive treatment modality for vital primary teeth diagnosed with irreversible pulpitis. Aim: This study primarily aims to assess the clinical and radiographic treatment outcomes of full pulpotomy in vital primary molars diagnosed with symptomatic irreversible pulpitis. Methods/Design: Healthy cooperative children, between 4-9 years of age, who have painful primary molars with symptoms typical of irreversible pulpitis will be recruited for the study from paediatric dental clinics located in eight countries (Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, U.A.E, Jordan, Egypt, U.S.A, and Thailand). The primary outcome that will be assessed are the clinical success rates after one-year and two-years of the pulpotomy intervention. The secondary outcomes that will be assessed include: (i) immediate post-operative pain relief after 24 h and 7-days of the pulpotomy intervention; and (ii) radiographic success rates after one-year and two-years of the pulpotomy intervention. The influence of baseline pre-operative variables (age; gender; tooth type; site of caries; pre-operative furcal radiolucency; pre-operative pain intensity) and intra-operative factors (time taken to achieve haemostasis) on treatment outcomes will also be evaluated. Discussion: This clinical trial seeks to provide evidence on whether pulpotomy can be used for the management of vital primary molars diagnosed with symptomatic irreversible pulpitis
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
120
Pulpotomy is a more conservative pulp treatment option where only the coronal pulp is removed and a medicament placement over the remnant radicular pulp after haemostasis is achieved.
Phcc - Airport Center
Doha, Qatar
PHCC- Leebaib Center
Doha, Qatar
Post-treatment clinical success
Clinical success will be determined at 6-, 12-, and 24-months based on the pulpotomy treated tooth meeting all the below criteria: * Treated tooth is not associated with any pain or discomfort * Treated tooth is not associated with tenderness on percussion or palpation * Treated tooth is not associated with any swelling, parulis, or fistula * Treated tooth is not associated with any pathological mobility
Time frame: 6 months, 12 months, 24 months
Immediate post-treatment pain relief
Pain scores that will be recorded at 24-hours and 7-days post-treatment using a child friendly Visual Analogue Scale (VAS). This pain score will be used to evaluate pain reduction afforded by the pulpotomy treatment intervention.
Time frame: 24 hours; 7 days
Post-treatment radiographic success
Radiographic success will be determined at 6-, 12-, and 24-months based on the pulpotomy treated tooth meeting all the below criteria: * No signs of pathological internal/external root resorption or new furcal/periapical lesions on recall periapical radiographs * Complete radiographic healing or reduction/no change in size of any pre-treatment furcal rarefaction on recall periapical radiographs
Time frame: 6 months, 12 months, 24 months
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