| Literature DB >> 35743982 |
Ana-Belén Dablanca-Blanco1, Pablo Castelo-Baz1, Ramón Miguéns-Vila1, Pablo Álvarez-Novoa1, Benjamín Martín-Biedma1.
Abstract
Clinicians should be aware of all the characteristics and capacities of the instruments that are possible to use when conducting a root canal treatment. The wide variety of nickel-titanium (Ni-Ti) rotary systems on the market and the lack of standardisation of this type of instrument makes the choice in each specific case difficult. Therefore, this review is intended to summarize the characteristics that should be taken into account when choosing one instrument over another. It will be essential to know characteristics, of alloy from which the instrument is made. Moreover, the geometry of the instrument will determine its behaviour, being the mass, the one that marks its resistance to a greater extent. The movement performed by the file is another of the fundamental keys to understand rotary instruments. In conclusion, when performing root canal treatment, the characteristics of the instrument and the tooth must be taken into account, and the operator's own limitations should be known. This paper provides the key points to keep in mind when making this type of treatment.Entities:
Keywords: NiTi; design; endodontics; rotary files; rotation
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35743982 PMCID: PMC9230915 DOI: 10.3390/medicina58060719
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicina (Kaunas) ISSN: 1010-660X Impact factor: 2.948
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram for review of the literature.
Figure 2Parts of rotary file.
Figure 3Thermogram of martensitic transformation temperatures. At a high temperature (100 °C) the NiTi alloy is in the austenitic phase and if it is cooled, alloy change to the martensitic phase (Ms) up to a certain temperature at which all the crystals of the alloy have become martensitic (Mf). The same happens if the temperature increases, such that the temperature at which this phenomenon begins is called the austenite transformation start temperature (As) and the temperature at which this phenomenon is complete is called the austenite finish temperature (Af).
Figure 4NiTi stress–strain graph. A: deformation of the austenitic phase (proportional elastic deformation). A-M: transition zone from austenitic (A) to martensitic (M), a large amount of deformation occurs without a large increase in stress. M: follows the typical behaviour of a stress–strain graph: linear elasticity, yield point and fracture point.