| Literature DB >> 33680899 |
Amelia Wan Tin Cheung1, Angeline Hui Cheng Lee1, Gary Shun Pan Cheung1.
Abstract
Root canal debridement, which includes the removal of infected tissues and microbial biofilms, is considered the corner stone of root canal treatment. Chemical adjuncts play a multitude of functions in this regard, as tissue solvents, antimicrobial agents and for removing the smear layer. These adjuncts (irrigants) are usually delivered using a syringe and needle. With increasing knowledge of the complexity of root canal anatomy and tenacity of microbial biofilms, the need for strategies that potentiate the action of these irrigants within the root canal system cannot be overemphasized. Several such activated irrigation strategies exist. The aim of this review is to comprehensively discuss the different irrigant activation methods from the context of clinical studies.Entities:
Keywords: Microbial reduction; Pain; Root canal treatment; Sodium hypochlorite; Sonic; Ultrasonic
Year: 2021 PMID: 33680899 PMCID: PMC7906851 DOI: 10.5395/rde.2021.46.e10
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Restor Dent Endod ISSN: 2234-7658
Electronic search strategy with PubMed
| Number | Search strategy | Results |
|---|---|---|
| #1 | root canal | 36,454 |
| #2 | agitation OR activation OR machine-assisted OR syringe irrigation OR manual dynamic agitation OR sonic OR ultrasonic OR light activated disinfection OR photodynamic therapy OR photo activated disinfection OR laser OR photon-induced photo acoustic streaming OR apical negative pressure OR multisonic | 5,608,203 |
| #3 | microbial reduction OR antimicrobial OR biofilm OR healing OR apical periodontitis OR pain OR quality of life | 3,191,671 |
| #4 | #1 AND #2 AND #3 | 200 |
Figure 1A flowchart of the article selection process.
*Four studies investigated the effects on 2 outcome measures.
Summary of the methodology and results of studies for healing of apical periodontitis (8 studies total)
| Study | Year | Experimental groups & irrigants used | Outcome measures | Key findings | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Liang | 2013 | ⋄ Syringe needle irrigation (3 × 2 mL 5.25% NaOCl with 10 sec in canal without agitation; final irrigation time 60 sec) | ⋄ Presence of radiographic periapical lesion | ⋄ No significant difference between ultrasonically activated irrigation and syringe irrigation in periapical healing. | |
| ⋄ Ultrasonically activated irrigation (3 × 2mL 5.25% NaOCl with 10 sec of activation; final irrigation time 60 sec) | ⋄ Periapical radiograph and CBCT (lesion area and volume) | ||||
| ▪ Absence | |||||
| ▪ Reduction of radiolucency | |||||
| ▪ Enlargement of radiolucency | |||||
| ▪ Uncertain | |||||
| Tang | 2015 | ⋄ Ultrasonically activated irrigation (2.5% NaOCl) | ⋄ Presence of radiographic periapical lesion | ⋄ No significant difference between all groups in healing after 6 months and 12 months. | |
| ⋄ Ultrasonically activated irrigation (silver ion antibacterial solution) | ⋄ Periapical radiograph (PAI score 1–5) | ||||
| ⋄ Syringe needle irrigation (2.5% NaOCl) | |||||
| Cohenca | 2015 | ⋄ Apical negative pressure (30 sec 5.25% NaOCl, 30 sec 17% EDTA, 30 sec 5.25% NaOCl) | ⋄ Dog teeth, experimentally induced periapical lesions | ⋄ All groups had similar periapical response. | |
| ⋄ Ultrasonically activated irrigation (30 sec 5.25% NaOCl + 20 sec of activation; 30 sec 17% EDTA + 20 sec of activation; 30 sec 5.25% NaOCl + 20 sec of activation) | ⋄ Presence of radiographic periapical lesion | ⋄ Apical negative pressure group had the mildest infiltration of inflammatory cells. | |||
| ⋄ Syringe needle irrigation (30 sec of 5.25% NaOCl, 30 sec of 17% EDTA, 30 sec of 5.25% NaOCl) | ⋄ Periapical radiograph (lesion area) | ||||
| ⋄ Histology (conventional & fluorescence microscopy & staining) | |||||
| ▪ Thickness of PDL: score 1–4 | |||||
| ▪ Inflammatory infiltration: score 1–4 | |||||
| ▪ Resorption process of the mineralized tissue: score 1–2 (presence or absence) | |||||
| De Jesus | 2019 | ⋄ Apical negative pressure (30 sec 5.25% NaOCl; 30 sec 17% EDTA; 30 sec 5.25% NaOCl) | ⋄ Dog teeth, experimentally induced periapical lesions | ⋄ No significant difference between the groups; repair of apical periodontitis occurred in up to 60% of cases regardless of irrigation protocol used. | |
| ⋄ Ultrasonically activated irrigation (30 sec 5.25% NaOCl + 20 sec of activation; 30 sec 17% EDTA + 20 sec of activation; 30 sec 5.25% NaOCl + 20 sec of activation) | ⋄ Presence of radiographic periapical lesion | ||||
| ⋄ Syringe needle irrigation (30 sec of 5.25% NaOCl; 30 sec of 17% EDTA; 30 sec of 5.25% NaOCl) | ⋄ Periapical radiograph (PAI score 1–5) | ||||
| ⋄ Immunohistochemistry | |||||
| ▪ Tumor necrosis factor (TNF-α) | |||||
| ▪ Osteopontin (OPN) | |||||
| ▪ Interleukin 1α (IL-1α) | |||||
| Sigurdsson | 2016 | ⋄ GentleWave (3% NaOCl, distilled water rinse; 8% EDTA; 30 sec final distilled water rinse; 2 min 8% EDTA; 15 sec distilled water rinse) | ⋄ Presence of radiographic periapical lesion | ⋄ GentleWave resulted in 97.4% success rate of healing. | |
| ⋄ Periapical radiograph (PAI score 1–5) | |||||
| Sigurdsson | 2016 | ⋄ GentleWave (3% NaOCl, distilled water rinse; 8% EDTA; 30 sec final distilled water rinse; 2 min 8% EDTA; 15 sec distilled water rinse) | ⋄ Presence of radiographic periapical lesion | ⋄ GentleWave resulted in 97.3% success rate of healing. | |
| ⋄ Periapical radiograph (PAI score 1–5) | |||||
| Sigurdsson | 2018 | ⋄ GentleWave (3% NaOCl, distilled water rinse; 8% EDTA; 30 sec final distilled water rinse; 2 min 8% EDTA; 15 sec distilled water rinse) | ⋄ Presence of radiographic periapical lesion | ⋄ GentleWave resulted in 97.7% success rate of healing. | |
| ⋄ Periapical radiograph (PAI score 1–5) | ⋄ 43 out of 44 were completely functional. | ||||
| Martins | 2013 | ⋄ Syringe needle irrigation + Ca(OH)2 (1st appt: 5 mL 3% NaOCl during instrumentation, Ca(OH)2 dressing; 2nd appt: 5 mL 3% NaOCl) | ⋄ Presence of radiographic periapical lesion | ⋄ No significant differences in periapical healing between the groups. | |
| ⋄ Er,Cr:YSGG (1st appt: 2 mL saline during instrumentation, 4 times irradiation with 2 with canals filled with distilled water, 2 in dry condition; 2nd appt: repeat irradiation procedures, 5 mL saline rinse 1 min) | ⋄ Periapical radiograph (PAI score 1–5) | ||||
NaOCl, sodium hypochlorite; CBCT, cone beam computed tomography; EDTA, ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid; PAI, periapical index; Er,Cr:YSGG, Erbium, Chromium doped Yttrium Scandium Gallium Garnet.
Summary of the methodology and results of studies for microbial reduction (20 studies total)
| Study | Year | Experimental groups & irrigants used | Outcome measures | Key findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Huffaker | 2010 | ⋄ Syringe needle irrigation (2 × NaOCl with 30 sec in canal without agitation; final irrigation time 60 sec) | ⋄ Bacterial sampling and culturing (CFU) | ⋄ No significant difference in the ability of sonic and needle control group to eliminate cultivable bacteria from root canals. |
| ⋄ Sonic irrigation (2 × NaOCl with 30 sec of activation; final irrigation time 60 sec) | ||||
| Rico-Romano | 2016 | ⋄ Sonic irrigation (30 sec 5.25% NaOCl) | ⋄ Bacterial sampling and culturing (CFU) | ⋄ No significant differences between NaOCl and CHX groups. |
| ⋄ Ultrasonically activated irrigation (1 min 5.25% NaOCl) | ⋄ Effectiveness of ultrasonic activation was significantly higher than sonic activation. | |||
| ⋄ Sonic irrigation (30 sec 2% CHX) | ||||
| ⋄ Ultrasonically activated irrigation (1 min 2% CHX) | ||||
| Beus | 2012 | ⋄ Syringe needle irrigation (6 mL 1% NaOCl) | ⋄ Bacterial sampling and culturing | ⋄ No significant differences between syringe needle irrigation and ultrasonically activated irrigation. |
| ⋄ Ultrasonically activated irrigation (2 × 30 sec 1% NaOCl of activation; 2 × 30 sec 17% EDTA of activation; 2 × 30 sec 2% CHX of activation) | ||||
| Cohenca | 2013 | ⋄ Apical negative pressure (30 sec 5.25% NaOCl; 30 sec 17% EDTA; 30 sec 5.25% NaOCl; final irrigation time 90 sec) | ⋄ Dog teeth, experimentally induced periapical lesions | ⋄ Apical negative pressure was significantly better in reducing gram (−) bacteria than syringe needle irrigation. |
| ⋄ Ultrasonically activated irrigation (10 sec 5.25% NaOCl + 20 sec activation; 10 sec 17% EDTA + 20 sec activation; 10 sec 5.25% NaOCl + 20 sec activation; final irrigation time 90 sec) | ⋄ Bacterial sampling and culturing (CFU) | ⋄ No statistically significant differences between syringe needle irrigation and ultrasonically activated irrigation. | ||
| ⋄ Syringe needle irrigation (30 sec 5.25% NaOCl; 30 sec 17% EDTA; 30 sec 5.25% NaOCl; final irrigation time 90 sec) | ||||
| ⋄ [Positive control] syringe needle irrigation (3 × 30 sec saline) | ||||
| ⋄ [Negative control] no inoculation of bacteria | ||||
| Nakamura | 2018 | ⋄ Ultrasonically activated irrigation (2 × 30 sec 2 mL 2.5% NaOCl of activation; 2 × 30 sec 2 mL 17% EDTA of activation; 2 × 30 sec 2 mL 2.5% NaOCl of activation) | ⋄ Human teeth with necrotic pulps and asymptomatic apical periodontitis. | ⋄ Ultrasonic activation was more effective than syringe needle irrigation for reducing the number of bacteria but not the endotoxin levels in root canals of teeth with apical periodontitis. |
| ⋄ Syringe needle irrigation (2 × 30 sec 2 mL 2.5% NaOCl; 2 × 30 sec 2 mL 17% EDTA; 2 × 30 sec 2 mL 2.5% NaOCl) | ⋄ Bacterial sampling (total bacteria count qPCR and endotoxin levels by limulus amebocyte lysate essay) | |||
| Carver | 2007 | ⋄ Hand/rotary technique (15 mL 6% NaOCl syringe needle irrigation) | ⋄ Bacterial sampling and culturing (CFU) | ⋄ Additional one minute of ultrasonic activation resulted in significant reduction in bacteria count. |
| ⋄ Hand/rotary/ultrasonic technique (15 mL 6% NaOCl syringe needle irrigation; 1 min 6% NaOCl of activation [15 mL /min flow rate]) | ||||
| Paiva | 2013 | ⋄ Before instrumentation | ⋄ Human teeth with necrotic pulp | ⋄ Ultrasonic activated irrigation did not have significant enhancement in disinfection beyond instrumentation based on this small sample. |
| ⋄ After instrumentation (syringe needle irrigation of 2.5% NaOCl; 17% EDTA; 2.5% NaOCl) | ⋄ Bacterial sampling (qPCR) | |||
| ⋄ Ultrasonic activated irrigation (1 min 2.5% NaOCl; needle irrigation of 3 mL 2.5% NaOCl) | ||||
| Paiva | 2012 | ⋄ Ultrasonic activated irrigation (1 min 2 mL 2.5% NaOCl; needle irrigation of 3 mL 2.5% NaOCl) | ⋄ Human teeth with necrotic pulps and apical periodontitis. | ⋄ No significant difference between additional irrigation methods with ultrasonic or chlorhexidine rinse. |
| ⋄ Chlorhexidine rinse (needle irrigation of 5 mL 2% CHX) | ⋄ Bacterial sampling and culturing (qPCR) | ⋄ Supplementary disinfection with either ultrasonic activated irrigation or chlorhexidine rinse reduced bacterial count. | ||
| Burleson | 2007 | ⋄ Hand/rotary technique (15 mL 6% NaOCl syringe needle irrigation; [15 mL/min flow rate]) | ⋄ Human teeth with necrotic pulps and apical periodontitis. | ⋄ Canal and isthmus cleanliness values (biofilm and necrotic debris) were significantly higher for hand/rotary/ultrasound technique at all levels evaluated. |
| ⋄ Hand/rotary/ultrasonic technique (15 mL 6% NaOCl syringe needle irrigation; 1 min 6% NaOCl of ultrasonic activation [15 mL/min flow rate]) | ⋄ Extracted after irrigation protocol; histology | |||
| ⋄ [Negative control] no treatment | ||||
| Gutarts | 2005 | ⋄ Hand/rotary technique (15 mL 6% NaOCl syringe needle irrigation; [15 mL/min flow rate]) | ⋄ Human teeth with necrotic pulps and apical periodontitis. | ⋄ Canal and isthmus cleanliness values (remaining pulp tissues) were significantly higher for hand/rotary/ultrasound technique at all levels except one. |
| ⋄ Hand/rotary/ultrasonic technique (15 mL 6% NaOCl syringe needle irrigation; 1 min 6% NaOCl of ultrasonic activation [15 mL/min flow rate]) | ⋄ Extracted after irrigation protocol; histology | |||
| ⋄ [Negative control] no treatment | ||||
| Pawar | 2012 | ⋄ Apical negative pressure (40 mL 0.5% NaOCl) | ⋄ Human teeth with necrotic pulps and apical periodontitis. | ⋄ Antimicrobial efficacy of apical pressure irrigation was comparable with syringe needle irrigation. |
| ⋄ Syringe needle irrigation (40 mL 0.5% NaOCl) | ⋄ Bacterial sampling and culturing | |||
| Cohenca | 2010 | ⋄ Apical negative pressure (10 mL 2.5% NaOCl; canal filled with no apical negative pressure for 60 sec; needle irrigation of sterile saline) | ⋄ Dog teeth, experimentally induced periapical lesions | ⋄ No significant difference between bacterial reduction between apical negative pressure and syringe needle irrigation with triantibiotic dressing. |
| ⋄ Syringe needle irrigation + triantibiotic dressing (10 mL 2.5% NaOCl; canal filled for 60 sec; sterile saline; triantibiotic dressing; 10 mL sterile saline) | ⋄ Bacterial sampling and culturing (CFU) | |||
| Lindström | 2017 | ⋄ Nd:YAG (4 times irradiation with canals filled with saline [20 sec intervals between each application]) | ⋄ Human teeth with apical periodontitis. | ⋄ Nd:YAG laser irradiation did not significantly produce negative bacterial culture compared to syringe needle irrigation. |
| ⋄ Syringe needle irrigation (1% NaOCl; 2 min 3 mL 15% EDTA; 30 mL 1% NaOCl; final irrigation volume 30 mL of 1% NaOCl) | ⋄ Bacterial sampling and culturing | |||
| Pourhajibagher | 2017 | ⋄ After removal of root filling | ⋄ Human teeth with secondary endodontic infections | ⋄ TBO-mediated PAD was significantly effective in reducing bacterial activity in secondary persistent endodontic infection. |
| ⋄ PAD (30 sec irradiation with toluidine blue O) | ⋄ Bacterial sampling and culturing; analytical profile index assays; 16S ribosomal RNA gene sequencing | |||
| Pourhajibagher | 2018 | ⋄ PAD (60 sec irradiation with toluidine blue O) | ⋄ Human teeth with apical periodontitis. | ⋄ TBO-mediated PAD was significantly effective in reducing bacterial activity in infected roots. |
| ⋄ Bacterial sampling and culturing (multiplex real-time PCR) | ||||
| Pourhajibagher | 2018 | ⋄ PAD (60 sec irradiation with toluidine blue O) | ⋄ Human teeth with apical periodontitis. | ⋄ TBO-mediated PAD significantly decreased microbial diversity and count of infected roots. |
| ⋄ Bacterial sampling and culturing (PCR) | ||||
| Asnaashari | 2017 | ⋄ PAD (60 sec irradiation with 0.5 mL of toluidine blue O) | ⋄ Human teeth with apical periodontitis requiring root canal retreatment. | ⋄ PAD was more effective in reduction of |
| ⋄ Ca(OH)2 (2 weeks post-instrumentation) | ⋄ Bacterial sampling and culturing (CFU) | |||
| Jurič | 2014 | ⋄ After removal of root filling | ⋄ Human teeth with apical periodontitis requiring root canal retreatment. | ⋄ Endodontic retreatment alone produced a significant reduction in number of bacterial species. |
| ⋄ After instrumentation and irrigation (needle irrigation of 1 mL 2.5% NaOCl; 1 min 1 mL 17% EDTA; 1 mL 2.5% NaOCl) | ⋄ Bacterial sampling and culturing (CFU) | ⋄ Combination of retreatment procedures with aPDT was statistically more effective. | ||
| ⋄ aPDT (60 sec irradiation with phenothiazinium chloride) | ||||
| Garcez | 2010 | ⋄ After accessing the root canal | ⋄ Human teeth with apical periodontitis requiring root canal retreatment. | ⋄ The addition of aPDT to root canal treatment led to further major reduction in bacterial load. |
| ⋄ After instrumentation and irrigation (needle irrigation of 5 mL 17% EDTA; 5 mL PBS) | ⋄ Bacterial sampling and culturing | |||
| ⋄ aPDT (60 sec irradiation with polyethylenimine chlorin[e6]) | ||||
| López | 2015 | ⋄ SX 400 ppm Sterilox +PAD (120 sec irradiation with toluidine blue O) | ⋄ Dog teeth, experimentally induced periapical lesions | ⋄ PAD did not produce significant differences in the scores for apical inflammation when used after chemo-mechanical preparation |
| ⋄ 2% NaOCl + PAD (120 sec irradiation with toluidine blue O) | ⋄ Light microscopy (severity of inflammation) | |||
| ⋄ 5% NaOCl + PAD (120 sec irradiation with toluidine blue O) | ||||
| ⋄ Saline + PAD (120 sec irradiation with toluidine blue O) | ||||
| ⋄ SX 400 ppm Sterilox | ||||
| ⋄ 2% NaOCl | ||||
| ⋄ 5% NaOCl | ||||
| ⋄ Saline |
NaOCl, sodium hypochlorite; CFU, colony-forming unit; CHX, chlorhexidine; EDTA, ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid; qPCR, quantitative polymerase chain reaction; Nd:YAG, Neodymium-doped Yttrium Aluminum Garnet; PAD, photoactivated disinfection; TBO, toluidine blue O; aPDT, antimicrobial photodynamic therapy; PBS, phosphate-buffered saline.
Summary of the methodology and results of studies for post-operative pain (12 studies total)
| Study | Year | Experimental groups & irrigants used | Outcome measures | Key findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ramamoorthi | 2015 | ⋄ Syringe needle irrigation (40 sec 4 mL 3% NaOCl; flow rate 0.1 mL/s−1) | ⋄ Patients with symptomatic irreversible pulpitis | ⋄ Sonic irrigation resulted in significantly less post-operative pain and analgesics intake than syringe needle irrigation group. |
| ⋄ Sonic irrigation (2 × 1 min 2 mL 3% NaOCl of activation) | ⋄ VAS score (0–10) at 8, 24 & 48 hours | |||
| ⋄ Amount of analgesic intake | ||||
| Topçuoğlu | 2018 | ⋄ Syringe needle irrigation (1 min 5 mL 3% NaOCl; 1 min 2 mL 17% EDTA) | ⋄ Patients with symptomatic irreversible pulpitis | ⋄ Manual dynamic agitation caused greater post-operative pain after root canal treatment of symptomatic irreversible pulpitis cases in the first 24 hours. |
| ⋄ Sonic irrigation (1 min 5 mL 3% NaOCl of activation; 1 min 2 mL 17% EDTA of activation) | ⋄ VAS score (0–10) at 6, 24, 48 & 72 hours and 1 week | |||
| ⋄ Ultrasonic activated irrigation (1 min 5 mL 3% NaOCl of activation; 1 min 2 mL 17% EDTA of activation) | ||||
| ⋄ Manual dynamic agitation (1 min 5 mL 3% NaOCl of activation; 1 min 2 mL 17% EDTA of activation) | ||||
| Al-Zaka [ | 2012 | ⋄ Syringe needle irrigation (30 sec 1 mL 2.5% NaOCl; 1 mL 2.5% NaOCl) | ⋄ Patients with asymptomatic irreversible pulpitis | ⋄ Apical negative irrigation significantly lower post-operative pain compared to syringe needle irrigation and sonic irrigation at all intervals evaluated. |
| ⋄ Sonic irrigation (30 sec 1 mL 2.5% NaOCl of activation; needle irrigation of 1 mL 2.5% NaOCl) | ⋄ VAS score (1–4) at 4, 24 & 48 hours | |||
| ⋄ Apical negative pressure (30 sec 1 mL 2.5% NaOCl; needle irrigation of 1 mL 2.5% NaOCl) | ||||
| Yilmaz | 2019 | ⋄ Syringe needle irrigation (1 min 4 mL 2.5% NaOCl) | ⋄ Patients with nonvital pulps | ⋄ Significant less post-operative pain was reported when sonic irrigation was used compared to other groups. |
| ⋄ Sonic irrigation (1 min 4 mL 2.5% NaOCl of activation) | ⋄ VAS score (0–10) at 8, 24, 48 & 72 hours | ⋄ The combinations of sonic irrigation with NaOCl and QMix had the most significant decrease in pain. | ||
| ⋄ Syringe needle irrigation (1 min 4 mL 2.5% NaOCl; 3 mL sterile water; 1 min 3 mL QMix) | ⋄ Amount of analgesic intake | |||
| ⋄ Sonic irrigation (1 min 4 mL 2.5% NaOCl of activation; 3 mL sterile water; 1 min 3 mL QMix of activation) | ||||
| Tang | 2015 | ⋄ Ultrasonically activated irrigation (2.5% NaOCl) | ⋄ Patients with chronic apical periodontitis | ⋄ The post-operative pain levels were significantly less in ultrasonically activated irrigation groups when compared to syringe needle irrigation group. |
| ⋄ Ultrasonically activated irrigation (silver ion antibacterial solution) | ⋄ VAS score (0–10) at 24 hours | |||
| ⋄ Syringe needle irrigation (2.5% NaOCl) | ||||
| Middha | 2017 | ⋄ Continuous ultrasonic irrigation (15 mL 5.25% NaOCl) | ⋄ Patients with nonvital pulps and apical periodontitis | ⋄ Pain was significantly lower in the continuous ultrasonic irrigation group when compared to the syringe needle irrigation group only on first day post-operatively. |
| ⋄ Syringe needle irrigation (15 mL 5.25% NaOCl) | ⋄ VAS score (0–10) at every day for 7 days | |||
| ⋄ Amount of analgesic intake | ||||
| Coelho | 2019 | ⋄ aPDT (3 min irradiation with methylene blue) | ⋄ Patients with necrotic pulps | ⋄ Photodynamic therapy had significant effect in decreasing post-operative pain at 24 and 72 hours intervals. |
| ⋄ No aPDT (3 min no irradiation with methylene blue) | ⋄ VAS score (0–10) at 24 & 72 hours and 1 week | |||
| Gondim | 2010 | ⋄ Syringe needle irrigation (2.5% NaOCl; final irrigation volume 130 mL of NaOCl inclusive of instrumentation after each instrument) | ⋄ Patients with asymptomatic irreversible pulpitis or normal pulp | ⋄ Between 0–4 hours and 4–24 hours, intake of analgesics was significantly less in group treated by apical negative pressure irrigation. |
| ⋄ Apical negative pressure (2.5% NaOCl; final irrigation volume 130 mL of NaOCl inclusive of instrumentation after each instrument) | ⋄ VAS score (0–10) at 4, 24 & 48 hours | ⋄ The use of apical negative pressure irrigation can result in significant reduction in post-operative pain. | ||
| ⋄ Amount of analgesic intake | ||||
| Topçuoğlu | 2018 | ⋄ Syringe needle irrigation (20 mL 2.5% NaOCl [instrumentation]; 5 mL 17% EDTA; 5 mL distilled water) | ⋄ Patients with symptomatic irreversible pulpitis | ⋄ More post-operative pain was reported at the 6-, 24- and 48-hour intervals in syringe needle irrigation group when compared with apical negative pressure group. |
| ⋄ Apical negative pressure (20 mL 2.5% NaOCl [instrumentation]; 5 cycles of irrigation of 2.5% NaOCl; final irrigation time 30 sec; 5 mL 17% EDTA, 5 mL distilled water) | ⋄ VAS score (0–10) at 6, 24, 48 & 72 hours and 1 week | |||
| Sigurdsson | 2016 | ⋄ GentleWave (3% NaOCl, distilled water rinse; 8% EDTA; 30 sec final distilled water rinse; 2 min 8% EDTA; 15 sec distilled water rinse) | ⋄ Patients with tooth indicated for root canal treatment | ⋄ 3% of patients experienced moderate pain (VAS 7–8) within 2 days after initial treatment. |
| ⋄ VAS score (0–10) at 2, 7, 14 days and each review visit | ||||
| Sigurdsson | 2016 | ⋄ GentleWave (3% NaOCl, distilled water rinse; 8% EDTA; 30 sec final distilled water rinse; 2 min 8% EDTA; 15 sec distilled water rinse) | ⋄ Patients with tooth indicated for root canal treatment | ⋄ 3.8% of patients experienced moderate pain (VAS 7–8) within 2 days. |
| ⋄ VAS score (0–10) at 2, 7, 14 days and every 3, 6 and 12 months | ⋄ No pain reported at 2 weeks, 6 months and 12 months. | |||
| Sigurdsson | 2018 | ⋄ GentleWave (3% NaOCl, distilled water rinse; 8% EDTA; 30 sec final distilled water rinse; 2 min 8% EDTA; 15 sec distilled water rinse) | ⋄ Patients with tooth indicated for root canal treatment | ⋄ No patients experienced moderate to severe post-operative pain at 2-, 4- and 7-days post-operatively. |
| ⋄ VAS score (0–10) at before treatment, 2, 7, 14 days and each review visit |
NaOCl, sodium hypochlorite; VAS, visual analogue scale; EDTA, ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid; aPDT, antimicrobial photodynamic therapy.