Endodontic Clinic Manual-1
Endodontic Clinic Manual-1
Endodontic Clinic Manual-1
Endodontic Department
ENDODONTIC CLINIC MANUAL
NAME:
NUMBER:
ACADEMIC YEAR:
ENDODONTIC CLINIC MANUAL
Description:
This clinic manual contains a brief review of treatment techniques along
with a detailed description of procedural guidelines. All students should
review the sections before initiating treatment.
Rationale:
Providing patient treatment in a new clinical discipline is quiet challenging.
Although the stress associated with your first few experiences cannot be
completely eliminated, it can be greatly reduced if you are familiar with the
procedures that you will be expected to follow.
Intended learning outcomes:
The student should be able to complete the following tasks:
I. Diagnose endodontic pathosis (both pulpal & periapical).
II. Assess case difficulty.
III. Set up the appropriate treatment plan for each endodontic disease
entity.
IV. Arrange instruments and materials in such a manner that efficient,
aseptic Endodontic treatment can be provided.
V. Control pain & / or swelling before, during or after treatment.
VI. Isolate any tooth that requires Endodontic treatment.
VII. Prepare an access preparation that allows free passage of instruments
to the apical 1/3 of the root canal.
VIII. Prepare the appropriate roots to the appropriate preparation sizes.
IX. Obturate instrumented canals with three-dimensional fills.
X. Expose and document accurate, useful radiographs of treated and
completed cases.
XI. Complete and submit the necessary documented clinical requirements
in the allocated time.
INFECTION CONTROL GUIDELINES
Before Treatment
Hand washing:
§ End with a cold-water rinse to close the pores & dry with paper
towels.
During Treatment
are to be used when splashing or spattering of blood and saliva is
likely.
§ Clinic Jackets: long sleeve, cuffed clinic jackets are worn to protect
the user from injury and the spatter of body fluids & change daily or
more often if visibly soiled.
After Treatment
§ Use a hemostat to place used sutures, blades and needles into sharps
container.
§ All heat tolerant items (instruments & hand pieces) are cleaned &
packed for sterilization.
SELECTION OF CASES
CASE HISTORY
provoked, and when it occurred. Any history of trauma and the
approximate date of occurrence should be noted. If the tooth is
discolored, indicate and describe the discoloration and possible cause.
CLINICAL EXAM
• The clinical exam will consist of several steps. It starts with an extra-
oral exam and proceeds to specific tests, which determine possible
Endodontic origin of a specific problem.
• Initially, the patient's face should be inspected for signs of asymmetry
due to swelling. The lymph nodes associated with drainage from the
oral cavity should be palpated to identify enlarged or tender nodes.
• Intra-orally, the area in question should be observed for vestibular,
palatal, and/or lingual swelling. Presence of swelling, as well as the
presence of a sinus tract, is to be noted.
• Percussion and palpation tests will be done for all teeth in question.
• The depth of the gingival sulcus on the mesial, facial, distal, and
lingual/palatal aspects of the tooth is to be measured and recorded, as
well as the degree of tooth mobility.
• When appropriate, an electric pulp test and thermal test are done.
• The tooth should be examined for presence of discoloration and
transmission of light. A discoloration or darkness to transmitted light
should be noted.
RADIOGRAPHIC EXAMINATION
• Manual film processing guidelines
When hand processing in the quick developing boxes, using the
following minimum times
- Developing: at least 30 seconds, 45-60 seconds is best.
- Water rinse
- Quick Fixing: fixing at least 1 minute is needed before viewing the
image (a poorly quick fixed x-ray film will appear green or
clouded).
- Complete Fixing requires approximately 10 minutes.
- Final water rinse: when films are taken chair-side they should be
placed in a cup of water to complete the final wash. This also
requires a minimum of 10 minutes (a poorly washed film will turn
brown and opaque over time)
RADIOGRAPHIC INTERPRETATION
PULPAL DIAGNOSIS
• Reversible pulpitis implies that the pulp tissue will heal and that RCT
will not be necessary.
• Irreversible pulpitis means that the pulp is vital but is damaged to
the extent that it will not heal.
• Necrosis means that only necrotic tissue will be found throughout
most of the root canal system.
• Devitalization implies a normal pulp that is being extirpated for
restorative reasons.
PERIAPICAL DIAGNOSIS
RESTORATIVE EVALUATION
RUBBER DAM ISOLATION
• Latex.
• Non-latex: made from silicone, for patients allergic to latex.
Colors
Thickness
Frames
• Plastic
• Metal: can interfere with radiographic interpretation.
Clamps
For large molars For small molars
PLACEMENT TECHNIQUES
• As a single unit
• Clamp first
• Sheet first
• Bow technique
ACCESS CAVITY PREPARATIONS
The morphology of the chamber is triangular in design with high pulp horns
on mesial and distal aspects of the chamber. The access opening is triangular
in shape. The outline form of the access cavity changes to a more oval shape
as the tooth matures and the pulp horns recede because the mesial and distal
pulp horns are less prominent. A lingual ledge or lingual bulge is often
present (Figure A).
Maxillary Canine
The chamber shape is usually elliptical or oval. The access opening is oval
on the lingual surface and should be in the middle third of the tooth, both
mesiodistally and incisal-apically. Because of its shape, the clinician must
take care to circumferentially file the access opening labially and palatally to
shape and clean the canal properly. A lingual edge may be present but is
usually not clinically significant (Figure C).
The chamber is usually oval and maintains a similar width from the occlusal
level to the floor, which is located just apical to the cervical line. The palatal
orifice is slightly larger than the buccal orifice. In cross section at the CEJ,
the palatal orifice is wider buccolingually and kidney-shaped because of its
mesial concavity. The access opening is oval on the occlusal surface and
should be in the middle third of the tooth, both mesiodistally and
buccolingually. Buccal and lingual cusps should not be undermined during
access opening preparation. The buccal pulp horn usually is larger. There are
often ledges of calcification on the buccal and/or lingual walls just coronal
to the orifice that may inhibit straight-line access to the canal system (Figure
D).
The chamber morphology is usually oval. A buccal and a palatal pulp horn
are present; the buccal pulp horn is larger. The access opening is oval on the
occlusal surface and should be in the middle third of the tooth, both
mesiodistally and buccolingually. The buccal and lingual cusps should not
be undermined during access opening preparation. The single root is oval
and wider buccolingually than mesiodistally, so the canal(s) remains oval
from the pulp chamber floor and tapers rapidly to the apex (Figure E).
This shape of this chamber is usually less triangular and more oval than the
maxillary first molar. The access opening is triangular, but becomes more
straightened in a mesiobuccal- palatal direction. Preparation of the access
should be distal to the mesial marginal ridge, within the middle one- third
buccolingually, and mesial to the transverse ridge. Care should be taken not
to undermine the transverse ridge during preparation. The opening begins
slightly more distally than in the first molar because of the location of the
canal and root structure. When four canals are present, the access cavity
preparation of the maxillary second molar has a rhomboid shape and is a
smaller version of the access cavity for the maxillary first molar. If only
three canals are present, the access cavity is a rounded triangle with the base
to the buccal. As with the maxillary first molar, the mesial marginal ridge
need not be invaded. Because the tendency in maxillary second molars is for
the distobuccal orifice to move closer to a line connecting the MB and P
orifices, the triangle becomes more obtuse and the oblique ridge is normally
not invaded. If only two canals are present, the access outline form is oval
and widest in the buccolingual dimension. Its width corresponds to the
mesiodistal width of the pulp chamber, and the oval usually is centered
between the mesial pit and the mesial edge of the oblique ridge (Figure G).
The chamber is usually less triangular and more oval in shape than the
maxillary second molar. The access opening is somewhat triangular, but
tends to rotate as the DB canal orifice becomes more aligned with the palatal
canal. Preparation can begin in the central fossae and proceed in a
buccopalatal direction. The access cavity form for the third molar can vary
greatly, because the tooth typically has one to three canals that would require
the access preparation to be anything from an oval that is widest in the
buccolingual dimension to a rounded triangle similar to that used for the
maxillary second molar. The MB, DB, and P orifices often lie nearly in a
straight line. The resultant access cavity is an oval or a very obtuse triangle
(Figure H).
Mandibular Central and Lateral Incisors
The chamber shape is triangular to oval in design, with high pulp horns on
mesial and distal aspects of the chamber in younger patients. A lingual ledge
or lingual bulge may be present, which restricts visualization of the canal
orifice and prevents straight-line access of the canal system. Often, the
access opening must be extended more lingually in order to obtain straight-
line access to the lingual orifice and the canal system. In addition, all
working length films taken of mandibular incisors should be exposed at a
slight mesial or distal angle to confirm the presence or absence of a second
canal. Due to their small size and internal anatomy, the mandibular incisors
may be the most difficult access cavities to prepare. The external outline
form may be triangular or oval, depending on the prominence of the mesial
and distal pulp horns. When the form is triangular, the incisal base is short
and the mesial and distal legs are long incisogingivally, creating a long,
compressed triangle. Without prominent mesial and distal pulp horns, the
oval external outline form also is narrow mesiodistally and long
incisogingivally. Complete removal of the lingual shoulder is critical,
because this tooth often has two canals that are buccolingually oriented, and
the lingual canal is most often missed. To avoid this, the clinician should
extend the access preparation well into the cingulum gingivally. Because the
lingual surface of this tooth is not involved with occlusal function, butt joint
junctions between the internal walls and the lingual surface are not required
(Figure I).
Mandibular Canine
Mandibular First Premolar
the mesiolingual cusp is larger than the distolingual cusp, the lingual
extension of the oval outline form is just distal to the tip of the mesiolingual
cusp (Figure L).
Mandibular Third Molar
The morphology of the chamber is usually less triangular and more oval than
the mandibular second molar. The access opening is also triangular to oval,
with a pulp chamber that tends to be very large and very deep. The anatomy
of the mandibular third molar is very unpredictable, and the access cavity
can take any of several shapes.
WORKING LENGTH DETERMINATION
• The working length determines how far into the canal the instruments
can be placed and worked.
• It affects the degree of pain and discomfort which the patient
experience following appointment by the virtue of over or under
instrumentation.
• If placed within correct limits, it plays an important role in
determining the success of treatment.
• When working length is short, it leads to apical leakage. Moreover,
there is continued existence of viable bacteria that contributes to
periradicular lesion and thus poor success rate.
• Measure the tooth on the properly aligned pre- operative radiograph.
• Subtract at least 1 mm, which is for safety factor for possible image
distortion or magnification.
• Set the instrument stopper at this tentative working length.
• Place the instrument in the canal until the stopper reach the sound
reference point.
• Expose the radiograph.
• On the radiograph estimate the difference between the end of the
instrument and the end of the root (radiographic apex), which ideally
should be 0.5-1 mm.
• If the instrument is over or under extended from this value, adjust
accordingly.
• Set the endodontic ruler at this new corrected length and readjust the
stop on the exploring instrument.
• A confirmatory radiograph of the new adjusted W.L. is highly
desirable because of the possibility of radiographic distortion, sharply
curving roots and operator measuring errors.
• CONFIRMATORY RADIOGRAPHS SHOUD BE DONE IF
WORKING LENGTH IS CORRECTED BY MORE THAN 1 MM.
CLEANING & SHAPING
• After finishing the access cavity preparation, the pulp chamber should
be irrigated with an adequate volume of sodium hypochlorite diluted
with water in the ratio 1:1.
• Achieve good dryness, and under adequate illumination, locate the
root canal orifice(s) using an endodontic explorer.
• A pathfile file number 10 or 15 adjusted at the provisional working
length (length of tooth at the pre-operative radiograph -1 mm) is used
to confirm the patency of the canal(s).
• The coronal third of the canal is flared with Gates Glidden drills size 2
or 3 or 4 (according to canal diameter).
• Preferably a larger file (number 20 or 25) is inserted in the canal at the
provisional working length (PWL) and a radiograph is taken.
• Working length is (WL) adjusted accordingly to be within 1 mm from
the radiographic apex.
• Apical preparation is done using flexible k-files at the correct WL in a
watch winding motion (30-60 degrees clockwise and counter
clockwise).
• Start with the initial file, which is the largest file that reaches WL and
binds (does not rotate easily).
• Work with successive files using the same motion until you reach the
master apical file (MAF).
• The file is changed when it rotate freely in the canal.
• Size of MAF depends on canals initial diameter, anatomy and whether
the case is a vital (inflamed) or a non-vital (infected) one.
• Minimum MAF sizes:
- Maxillary incisor & canines & single canalled premolars is 55.
- Maxillary lateral incisor and mandibular incisors is 45.
- Maxillary premolars with two canals are 35.
- Buccal canals of maxillary molars and mesial and distal canals of
mandibular molars are 35.
- Palatal canals of maxillary molars and distal canal of mandibular
molars (if it is a single canal) are 50.
• MAF is used in a circumferential filling motion to blend the
preparation of the apical part with that of the coronal part.
• Irrigation with 3 ml sodium hypochlorite coupled with canal patency
check using the patency file (number15) is done at each change of file.
OBTURATION
CHECKLIST FOR STUDENT SELF-EVALUATION
PRE-TREATMENT
OBTURATION
ENDODONTIC REQUIRMENT SHEET
STUDENT NAME:
NUMBER:
CASE NUMBER:
CLINICAL FINDINGS
SYMPTOMATIC ASYMPTOMATIC
LOCATION LOCALIZED DIFFUSE REFERRED
CHRONOLOGY CONSTANT MOMENTARY INTERMITTENT LINGERING
QUALITY SHARP DULL SPONTANEOUS OCCAJONAL
AFFECTED BY COLD HOT BITING PERCUSSION PALPATION POSTURE
RELEIVED BY COLD HOT ANALGESCICS NOT RELIEVED
EXTRA ORAL LYMPHADEN- INTRA ORAL SWELLING SINUS TRACT
SWELLING OPATHY LOCALIZED / DIFFUSE
RADIOGRAPHIC FINDINGS
PDL PDL BONE APICAL LATERAL OSTEOSCLEROSIS
NORMAL THICKENED NORMAL BONE BONE
RESORPTION RESORPTION
DIAGNOSIS
PULPAL PERIAPICAL
• WNL • WNL
• REVERSIBLE PULPITIS • ACUTE APICAL PERIODONTITIS
• IRREVERSIBLE PULPITIS • ACUTE APICAL ABSCESS
• PULP NECROSIS • CHRONIC APICAL PERIODONTITIS
• PRIOR RCT • PHOENIX ABSCESS
• CONDENSING OSTIETIS
PROGNOSIS
PULPAL PERIODONTAL RESTORATIVE
• FAVORABLE • FAVORABLE • FAVORABLE
• QUESTIONABLE • QUESTIONABLE • QUESTIONABLE
• POOR • POOR • POOR
• HOPELESS • HOPELESS • HOPELESS
ACCESS PREPARATION
GEOMETRIC OUTLINE:
• PROPERLY EXTENEDED • COMPLETE DEROOFING • ADEQUATE
• INCOMPLETE DEROOFING FLARING
• UNDER EXTENDED • INADEQUATE
• OVER EXTENDED FLARING
DATE SIGNATURE
DATE SIGNATURE
OBTURATION
DATE SIGNATURE
ENDODONTIC REQUIRMENT SHEET
STUDENT NAME:
NUMBER:
CASE NUMBER:
CLINICAL FINDINGS
SYMPTOMATIC ASYMPTOMATIC
LOCATION LOCALIZED DIFFUSE REFERRED
CHRONOLOGY CONSTANT MOMENTARY INTERMITTENT LINGERING
QUALITY SHARP DULL SPONTANEOUS OCCAJONAL
AFFECTED BY COLD HOT BITING PERCUSSION PALPATION POSTURE
RELEIVED BY COLD HOT ANALGESCICS NOT RELIEVED
EXTRA ORAL LYMPHADEN- INTRA ORAL SWELLING SINUS TRACT
SWELLING OPATHY LOCALIZED / DIFFUSE
RADIOGRAPHIC FINDINGS
PDL PDL BONE APICAL LATERAL OSTEOSCLEROSIS
NORMAL THICKENED NORMAL BONE BONE
RESORPTION RESORPTION
DIAGNOSIS
PULPAL PERIAPICAL
• WNL • WNL
• REVERSIBLE PULPITIS • ACUTE APICAL PERIODONTITIS
• IRREVERSIBLE PULPITIS • ACUTE APICAL ABSCESS
• PULP NECROSIS • CHRONIC APICAL PERIODONTITIS
• PRIOR RCT • PHOENIX ABSCESS
• CONDENSING OSTIETIS
PROGNOSIS
PULPAL PERIODONTAL RESTORATIVE
• FAVORABLE • FAVORABLE • FAVORABLE
• QUESTIONABLE • QUESTIONABLE • QUESTIONABLE
• POOR • POOR • POOR
• HOPELESS • HOPELESS • HOPELESS
ACCESS PREPARATION
GEOMETRIC OUTLINE:
• PROPERLY EXTENEDED • COMPLETE DEROOFING • ADEQUATE
• INCOMPLETE DEROOFING FLARING
• UNDER EXTENDED • INADEQUATE
• OVER EXTENDED FLARING
DATE SIGNATURE
DATE SIGNATURE
OBTURATION
DATE SIGNATURE
ENDODONTIC REQUIRMENT SHEET
STUDENT NAME:
NUMBER:
CASE NUMBER:
CLINICAL FINDINGS
SYMPTOMATIC ASYMPTOMATIC
LOCATION LOCALIZED DIFFUSE REFERRED
CHRONOLOGY CONSTANT MOMENTARY INTERMITTENT LINGERING
QUALITY SHARP DULL SPONTANEOUS OCCAJONAL
AFFECTED BY COLD HOT BITING PERCUSSION PALPATION POSTURE
RELEIVED BY COLD HOT ANALGESCICS NOT RELIEVED
EXTRA ORAL LYMPHADEN- INTRA ORAL SWELLING SINUS TRACT
SWELLING OPATHY LOCALIZED / DIFFUSE
RADIOGRAPHIC FINDINGS
PDL PDL BONE APICAL LATERAL OSTEOSCLEROSIS
NORMAL THICKENED NORMAL BONE BONE
RESORPTION RESORPTION
DIAGNOSIS
PULPAL PERIAPICAL
• WNL • WNL
• REVERSIBLE PULPITIS • ACUTE APICAL PERIODONTITIS
• IRREVERSIBLE PULPITIS • ACUTE APICAL ABSCESS
• PULP NECROSIS • CHRONIC APICAL PERIODONTITIS
• PRIOR RCT • PHOENIX ABSCESS
• CONDENSING OSTIETIS
PROGNOSIS
PULPAL PERIODONTAL RESTORATIVE
• FAVORABLE • FAVORABLE • FAVORABLE
• QUESTIONABLE • QUESTIONABLE • QUESTIONABLE
• POOR • POOR • POOR
• HOPELESS • HOPELESS • HOPELESS
ACCESS PREPARATION
GEOMETRIC OUTLINE:
• PROPERLY EXTENEDED • COMPLETE DEROOFING • ADEQUATE
• INCOMPLETE DEROOFING FLARING
• UNDER EXTENDED • INADEQUATE
• OVER EXTENDED FLARING
DATE SIGNATURE
DATE SIGNATURE
OBTURATION
DATE SIGNATURE
ENDODONTIC REQUIRMENT SHEET
STUDENT NAME:
NUMBER:
CASE NUMBER:
CLINICAL FINDINGS
SYMPTOMATIC ASYMPTOMATIC
LOCATION LOCALIZED DIFFUSE REFERRED
CHRONOLOGY CONSTANT MOMENTARY INTERMITTENT LINGERING
QUALITY SHARP DULL SPONTANEOUS OCCAJONAL
AFFECTED BY COLD HOT BITING PERCUSSION PALPATION POSTURE
RELEIVED BY COLD HOT ANALGESCICS NOT RELIEVED
EXTRA ORAL LYMPHADEN- INTRA ORAL SWELLING SINUS TRACT
SWELLING OPATHY LOCALIZED / DIFFUSE
RADIOGRAPHIC FINDINGS
PDL PDL BONE APICAL LATERAL OSTEOSCLEROSIS
NORMAL THICKENED NORMAL BONE BONE
RESORPTION RESORPTION
DIAGNOSIS
PULPAL PERIAPICAL
• WNL • WNL
• REVERSIBLE PULPITIS • ACUTE APICAL PERIODONTITIS
• IRREVERSIBLE PULPITIS • ACUTE APICAL ABSCESS
• PULP NECROSIS • CHRONIC APICAL PERIODONTITIS
• PRIOR RCT • PHOENIX ABSCESS
• CONDENSING OSTIETIS
PROGNOSIS
PULPAL PERIODONTAL RESTORATIVE
• FAVORABLE • FAVORABLE • FAVORABLE
• QUESTIONABLE • QUESTIONABLE • QUESTIONABLE
• POOR • POOR • POOR
• HOPELESS • HOPELESS • HOPELESS
ACCESS PREPARATION
GEOMETRIC OUTLINE:
• PROPERLY EXTENEDED • COMPLETE DEROOFING • ADEQUATE
• INCOMPLETE DEROOFING FLARING
• UNDER EXTENDED • INADEQUATE
• OVER EXTENDED FLARING
DATE SIGNATURE
DATE SIGNATURE
OBTURATION
DATE SIGNATURE
ENDODONTIC REQUIRMENT SHEET
STUDENT NAME:
NUMBER:
CASE NUMBER:
CLINICAL FINDINGS
SYMPTOMATIC ASYMPTOMATIC
LOCATION LOCALIZED DIFFUSE REFERRED
CHRONOLOGY CONSTANT MOMENTARY INTERMITTENT LINGERING
QUALITY SHARP DULL SPONTANEOUS OCCAJONAL
AFFECTED BY COLD HOT BITING PERCUSSION PALPATION POSTURE
RELEIVED BY COLD HOT ANALGESCICS NOT RELIEVED
EXTRA ORAL LYMPHADEN- INTRA ORAL SWELLING SINUS TRACT
SWELLING OPATHY LOCALIZED / DIFFUSE
RADIOGRAPHIC FINDINGS
PDL PDL BONE APICAL LATERAL OSTEOSCLEROSIS
NORMAL THICKENED NORMAL BONE BONE
RESORPTION RESORPTION
DIAGNOSIS
PULPAL PERIAPICAL
• WNL • WNL
• REVERSIBLE PULPITIS • ACUTE APICAL PERIODONTITIS
• IRREVERSIBLE PULPITIS • ACUTE APICAL ABSCESS
• PULP NECROSIS • CHRONIC APICAL PERIODONTITIS
• PRIOR RCT • PHOENIX ABSCESS
• CONDENSING OSTIETIS
PROGNOSIS
PULPAL PERIODONTAL RESTORATIVE
• FAVORABLE • FAVORABLE • FAVORABLE
• QUESTIONABLE • QUESTIONABLE • QUESTIONABLE
• POOR • POOR • POOR
• HOPELESS • HOPELESS • HOPELESS
ACCESS PREPARATION
GEOMETRIC OUTLINE:
• PROPERLY EXTENEDED • COMPLETE DEROOFING • ADEQUATE
• INCOMPLETE DEROOFING FLARING
• UNDER EXTENDED • INADEQUATE
• OVER EXTENDED FLARING
DATE SIGNATURE
DATE SIGNATURE
OBTURATION
DATE SIGNATURE