| Literature DB >> 35682452 |
Kavalipurapu Venkata Teja1, Krishnamachari Janani2, Abdullah Ali Alqahtani3, Ali Robaian3, Feras Alhalabi3, Khalid A Merdad4, Mohammad Khursheed Alam5,6,7, Deepti Shrivastava5, Jerry Jose8, Kumar Chandan Srivastava9.
Abstract
This systematic review aimed to compare the efficacy of herbal agents with ethylene diamine tetraacetic acid (EDTA) in removing the smear layer during root canal instrumentation. The research question in the present study was to assess: "Is there a significant difference in reducing smear layer comparing EDTA and herbal agents?" Electronic databases (PubMed, Scopus, and Web of Science) were searched from their start dates to April 2022 using strict inclusion and exclusion criteria, and reviewed following PRISMA (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses) 2020 guidelines. Only in vitro studies comparing herbal agents with EDTA were included in the current systematic review. Two reviewers independently assessed the included articles. A total of 625 articles were obtained from an electronic database. Eighteen papers were included for review of the full text, out of which, ten papers were excluded because they did not meet the inclusion criteria. Finally, eight articles were included in the systematic review. The present systematic review considered only in vitro studies; hence, the result cannot be completely translated to strict clinical conditions. The results of the present systematic review have shown that quixabeira, morindacitrifolia, oregano extract, and neem show better smear layer removal compared to other herbal agents, whereas they showed reduced smear layer removal when compared with EDTA. Although, it was seen that most of the included studies did not report a high quality of evidence. Hence, the present systematic review concludes that herbal agents have reported to show inferior smear layer removal when compared to EDTA. Thus, as far as herbal based alternatives are concerned, there is no highest level of evidence to state its real benefit when used as a chelating root canal irrigant.Entities:
Keywords: EDTA; disinfection; endodontics; herbal agents irrigants; natural components; root canal treatment; smear layer
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35682452 PMCID: PMC9180677 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19116870
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 4.614
Search strategy.
| PubMed | (((extracted teeth) AND (root canal treatment [MeSH Terms])) OR (endodontic treatment [MeSH Terms])) AND (herbal irrigants [MeSH Terms])) OR (herbal root canal irrigants)) OR (EDTA [MeSH Terms])) OR (Ethylenediaminetetraaceticacid [MeSH Terms])) OR (sodium hypochlorite solution [MeSH Terms])) OR (sodium hypochlorite root canal irrigant)) AND (smear layer removal) |
| Scopus | (TITLE-ABS-KEY (root canal therapy) OR TITLE-ABS-KEY (endodontic treatment) OR TITLE-ABS-KEY (root canal irrigants) AND TITLE-ABS KEY (sodium hypochlorite irrigant) OR ALL (ethylenediaminetetraaceticacid) OR ALL (edta) AND TITLE-ABS-KEY (smear layer removal)) |
| Cochrane library | #1 Endodontic treatment |
List of included articles.
| Author | Title of Included Article |
|---|---|
| Lahijani et al. 2006 [ | The effect of German chamomile ( |
| Murray et al. 2008 [ | Evaluation of Morinda Citrifolia as an Endodontic Irrigant |
| Candeiro et al. 2011 [ | A comparative scanning electron microscopy evaluation of smear layer removal with apple cidar vinegar and sodium hypochlorite associated with EDTA |
| Costa et al. 2012 [ | In vitro evaluation of the root canal cleaning ability of plant extracts and their antimicrobial action |
| Chabbra et al. 2015 [ | Smear layer removal efficacy of combination of herbal extracts in two different ratios either alone or supplemented with sonic agitation: An in vitro scanning electron microscope study |
| Evren OK et al. 2015 [ | Antibacterial and smear layer removal capability of oregano extract solution |
| Kumar A et al. 2018 [ | Comparative Evaluation of Antibacterial and Smear Layer Removal Efficacy of Two Different Herbal Irrigants: An in vitro Study |
| Susan et al. 2019 [ | Intra radicular Smear Removal Efficacy of Triphala as a Final Rinse Solution in Curved Canals: A Scanning Electron Microscope Study |
Figure 1PRISMA 2020 flow diagram for new systematic reviews which included searches of databases and registers only. * Consider, if feasible to do so, reporting the number of records identified from each database or register searched (rather than the total number across all databases/registers). ** If automation tools were used, indicate how many records were excluded by a human, and how many were excluded by automation tools.
Smear layer assessment.
| Author and Year | Selection of Teeth | Sample Size | Herbal Irrigant | Positive Control | Negative Control | Other Irrigant |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lahijani et al. 2006 [ | Single rooted permanent teeth | N = 40 | Group C: hydroalcoholic extract of German chamomile | Group B: 2.5% NaoCl with 17% EDTA | Group A: sterile distilled water | Group E: 2.5% NaoCl alone |
| Murray et al. 2008 [ | Permanent Single Rooted Premolar | N = 60 | Group 1: 6% MorindaCitrifolia Juice (MCJ) with a flush of 17% EDTA, followed by a final flush of MCJ | Group 4: 6% NaoCl | Group 6: Sterile Saline | Group 5: 2% Chlorhexidine |
| Candeiro et al. 2011 [ | Maxillary and mandibular molars | N = 40 | Group A—Apple vinegar | Group C—1% NaOCl and 17%EDTA as a final rinse | Group D: Saline | - |
| Costa et al. 2012 [ | Single rooted permanent teeth | N = 20 | Group 1: 50% Aroeira-Da-Praia | Group 3: 2.5% NaoCl with 17% EDTA | Not mentioned | - |
| Evren OK et al. 2015 [ | Permanent maxillary central incisors | N = 180 | Group 9: 1% OES + distilled water | Group 8: 5.25% NaoCl + 17% | Group 15: sterile saline + 17% | - |
| Chabbra et al. 2015 [ | Single canal teeth | N = 50 | Group C—Combination of | Group B—17% ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid | Group A— | |
| Kumar A et al. 2018 [ | Maxillary central incisors | N = 120 | Group IIB: 25% Neem extract (n = 20) | Group IIA: 17% EDTA (n = 20) | Not mentioned | - |
| Susan et al. 2019 [ | Mandibular first molar | N = 74 | Group 3: Triphala premixed | Group 2: 17% EDTA | Group 1: normal saline | - |
Methodology assessment for smear layer.
| Author and Year | Root Canal Preparation (Instruments Used and Size of Preparation) | Irrigation Protocol | Volume of Irrigant | Time of Irrigation | Needle Used for Irrigation | Irrigant Activation Devices Used |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lahijani et al. 2006 [ | K file up to 30 apical preparation | No protocol was mentioned | Intra instrumentation— | Intra instrumentation 10 s | Not mentioned in the study | Nil |
| Murray et al. 2008 [ | Protaper up to 35.06 | No protocol was mentioned | Not mentioned in the study | Not mentioned in the study | Not mentioned in the study | Nil |
| Candeiro et al. 2011 [ | Up to 45 K file | No protocol was mentioned | 2ml of irrigating solution at every change of file | Not mentioned | Not mentioned | Not mentioned |
| Costa et al. 2012 [ | Preparation size was not mentioned | No protocol was mentioned | Group 1 and 2—3 mL | Not mentioned in the study | Not mentioned in the study | Nil |
| Evren OK et al. 2015 [ | Protaper up to 50 0.6 | No protocol mentioned | 1min | Not mentioned | Nil | |
| Chabbra et al. 2015 [ | Apical size 35, 0.06 taper using nickel titanium files | No protocol was mentioned | During instrumentation, | 5 min | 30 gauge | Sonic activation performed in group D and F |
| Kumar et al. 2018 [ | K file up to 30 size apical preparation | No protocol mentioned | 6ml | 45 s | 25-gauge needle | Nil |
| Susan et al. 2019 [ | Up to apical size 25, 0.06 taper using rotary nickel–titanium files | 1 mL of the irrigant was used for canal irrigation after each instrument | 8 mL during biomechanical preparation, and 5 mL for final rinse | 3 min | 28-gauge side vented needle | Not mentioned |
Result assessment on smear layer.
| Author and Year | Smear Layer Evaluation Method | Assessment of Level of Root Canal | Magnification | Scoring Criteria | Statistical Analysis | % of Open Dentinal Tubules | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lahijani et al. 2006 [ | SEM analysis | Cervical, middle, and apical level of canal | 2000× and 5000× | Hulsmann et al. criteria | Kruskal–Wallis and Mann–Whitney U tests | 2.5% Naocl with 17%EDTA—no smear layer detected | 2.5% Naocl followed by 17% EDTA showed better results in smear layer when compared to chamomile extract. The least effective was tea tree oil |
| Murray et al. 2008 [ | SEM analysis | Cervical, middle, and apical level of canal | 2000× | Modified semi-quantitative visual criterion by Madison and Hokett criteria | X2 statistical test | % of complete smear layer removal | 6% MCJ was equally effective as 6% Naocl when 17% EDTA was used as final flush. |
| Candeiro et al. 2011 [ | SEM analysis | Middle and apical third | ×1000 | Vale et al. criteria | Kruskal–Wallis and Dunn’s test | Middle third less smear layer removal than apical third | Apple cider vinegar with EDTA showed better smear layer removal, followed by apple cider vinegar and NaoCl/EDTA |
| Costa et al. 2012 [ | SEM analysis | Cervical, middle, and apical level of canal | Not mentioned | Not mentioned | Kruskal–Wallis analysis | Naocl with EDTA—more accumulation of smear layer in apical third than middle and coronal | Quixabeira was found to be more effective in apical smear layer removal than Naocl with EDTA |
| Evren OK et al. 2015 [ | SEM analysis | Levels not mentioned | ×8000 | Not mentioned | Kruskal–Wallis and Mann–Whitney U tests | 1 or 2 or 5% oregano extract solution followed by 17% EDTA showed maximum removal of smear layer, whereas 1 or 2 or 5% oregano extract alone failed to remove the smear layer | 5.25% NaoCl followed by 17%EDTA showed similar effect on smear layer removal as that of 1 or 2 or 5% oregano extract solution |
| Chabbra et al. 2015 [ | SEM analysis | Coronal, middle, and apical third | ×1000 | Hulsmann et al. criteria | One-way analysis of variance. | Mean score of smear layer | 17% EDTA and Combination of |
| Kumar A et al. 2018 [ | SEM analysis | Levels not mentioned | Not mentioned | Rome et al. criteria | One-way analysis of variance. | Mean of smear layer | EDTA showed maximum removal of smear layer followed by neem extract. The least was observed with tulsi. |
| Susan et al. 2019 [ | SEM analysis | Coronal, middle, and apical third | ×2000 | Caron et al. | Not mentioned | Mean score of smear layer | Triphala showed |
Figure 2Risk of bias.
Risk of bias assessment on smear layer (predetermined criteria based on JBI criteria).
| Author and Year | Experimental Condition (Control Groups, Sampling Methods) | Evidence on Ethical Approval | Incomplete Data | Blinding | Standardization | Reporting Data |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lahijani et al. 2006 [ | Low | High | Unclear | High | Low | Unclear |
| Murray et al. 2008 [ | Low | Low | High | High | Low | Low |
| Candeiro et al. 2011 [ | Low | High | High | High | Unclear | Low |
| Costa et al. 2012 [ | Unclear | High | High (volume of irrigant, type of needle used not mentioned) | High | High (range of magnification for SEM analysis not mentioned) | Unclear |
| Evren OK et al. 2015 [ | Low | High | Low | High | Unclear | Low |
| Chabbra et al. 2015 [ | Low | High | Unclear | High | High | Unclear |
| Kumar A et al. 2018 [ | Unclear | High | Low | High | High | Unclear |
| Susan et al. 2019 [ | Low | High | Low | High | Low | Unclear |