4.2 Article

Root form and canal anatomy of maxillary first premolars: a cone-beam computed tomography study

Journal

ODONTOLOGY
Volume 110, Issue 2, Pages 365-375

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10266-021-00670-9

Keywords

Canal configuration; Cone-beam computed tomography; Endodontics; Maxillary premolars; Root morphology

Funding

  1. Medical University of Lodz, Poland [502-03/2-044-02/502-24-057]

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This study evaluated the root and canal morphology of permanent maxillary first premolars in a Polish population using CBCT scanning and compared the classifications by Vertucci and Ahmed et al. The results showed a wide range of anatomical variations in the root and canal morphology of these teeth, with the new classification system proposed by Ahmed et al. being more accurate than the traditional Vertucci classification.
The aim of this study was to evaluate the root and canal morphology of permanent maxillary first premolars in a Polish population using cone-beam computed tomography scanning (CBCT) and to compare the classifications by Vertucci and Ahmed et al. Images of 350 maxillary first premolars were analyzed. Scans were obtained from 226 patients: 131 women and 95 men. The root canal configurations were classified according to Vertucci and a new system by Ahmed et al. In addition, the number of roots and the level where roots bifurcated were identified. The results were submitted to statistical analysis. Most maxillary first premolars had two roots (69.1%). Most bifurcations were located in the coronal part of the root (44.2%) and the least in the apical part (15.3%). Bifurcation in the coronal part of the root was observed more often in the teeth of men than women. In turn, bifurcation in the central or apical part was significantly more common in women than in men. The most common canal configuration of the maxillary first premolars was type IV (78.2%) according to Vertucci and (FPBP1)-F-2-P-1 (65.4%) according to the new classification. Among the remaining cases, almost all types of canals described by Vertucci, and many combinations of codes given in the new classification were demonstrated. The maxillary first premolars displayed a wide range of root and canal anatomical variations. The new system for classifying canal morphology based on Ahmed et al. is more accurate than the Vertucci classification.

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