This clinical trial will evaluate the effectiveness of eggshell-derived calcium hydroxyapatite compared to calcium hydroxide as indirect pulp capping agent in permanent teeth. A total of 54 teeth from healthy individuals aged 18 to 40 years will be randomly allocated into two groups: Group A (experimental) treated with eggshell-derived calcium hydroxyapatite. Group B (control) treated with calcium hydroxide. After caries removal the assigned pulp capping agent will be applied, and the teeth will be restored. Clinical and radiographic evaluations will be performed at 1 and 3 months to assess pulp vitality, symptom-free status, and periapical health.
Dental caries is the most prevalent bacterial disease affecting both primary and permanent dentition. Modern dental practice emphasizes minimally invasive techniques that preserve pulp vitality. Indirect pulp capping is one such procedure, performed in teeth without signs of irreversible pulpitis, where infected dentine is removed while caries-affected dentine (CAD) is preserved and covered with a biocompatible material. Calcium hydroxide remains the most widely used pulp capping material despite its shortcomings. Hydroxyapatite, a stable synthetic calcium phosphate ceramic, has demonstrated excellent biocompatibility. Eggshells are a natural, abundant source of calcium carbonates and oxides, making them a promising precursor for hydroxyapatite. This randomized, double-blind clinical trial aims to evaluate and compare the clinical and radiographic outcomes of eggshell-derived calcium hydroxyapatite and calcium hydroxide as indirect pulp capping agents in permanent teeth with deep caries. Fifty-four teeth from healthy individuals aged 18-40 will be included. Random allocation will be performed using the lottery method. Group A (experimental) will receive eggshell-derived calcium hydroxyapatite, while Group B (control) will receive calcium hydroxide. Following rubber dam isolation and chemo-mechanical caries removal with carie-fix gel, infected dentine will be removed using a spoon excavator while CAD is preserved. The allocated pulp capping agent will be placed over CAD, followed by restoration with glass ionomer cement (GC Gold Label II) and composite resin. Clinical and radiographic assessments will be carried out at 1 month and 3 months. Clinical evaluation will include pulp vitality, pain on percussion, and mobility. Radiographic assessment will include reparative dentine thickness and absence of periapical pathology. The findings will determine whether eggshell-derived calcium hydroxyapatite can be considered a viable natural alternative to calcium hydroxide for indirect pulp capping.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
54
eggshell-derived calcium hydroxyapatite will be placed as an indirect pulp capping material after chemo-mechanical caries removal and before final restoration with glass ionomer cement and composite resin.
Calcium hydroxide will be placed as an indirect pulp capping material after chemo-mechanical caries removal and before final restoration with glass ionomer cement and composite resin.
de'Montmorency college of dentistry Lahore
Lahore, Punjab Province, Pakistan
clinical symptoms (pain on percussion, tooth mobility) and radiographic evaluation
Evaluates absence of pain and pathological mobility, Measures dentine bridge thickness and absence of periapical pathology.
Time frame: 3 months
restoration success, post operative sensitivity
Records patient-reported sensitivity and discomfort
Time frame: baseline to seven days
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