%0 Journal Article %T The effect of a manual instrumentation technique on five types of premolar root canal geometry assessed by microcomputed tomography and three-dimensional reconstruction %A Ke-Zeng Li %A Yuan Gao %A Ru Zhang %A Tao Hu %A Bin Guo %J BMC Medical Imaging %D 2011 %I BioMed Central %R 10.1186/1471-2342-11-14 %X Five single-root premolars, whose root canal systems were classified into one of five types, were scanned with micro-CT before and after preparation with a hand ProTaper instrument. Instrumentation characteristics were measured quantitatively in 3-D using a customized application framework based on MeVisLab. Numeric values were obtained for canal surface area, volume, volume changes, percentage of untouched surface, dentin wall thickness, and the thickness of dentin removed. Preparation errors were also evaluated using a color-coded reconstruction.Canal volumes and surface areas were increased after instrumentation. Prepared canals of all five types were straightened, with transportation toward the inner aspects of S-shaped or multiple curves. However, a ledge was formed at the apical third curve of the type II canal system and a wide range in the percentage of unchanged canal surfaces (27.4-83.0%) was recorded. The dentin walls were more than 0.3 mm thick except in a 1 mm zone from the apical surface and the hazardous area of the type II canal system after preparation with an F3 instrument.The 3-D color-coded images showed different morphological changes in the five types of root canal systems shaped with the same hand instrumentation technique. Premolars are among the most complex teeth for root canal treatment and instrumentation techniques for the root canal systems of premolars should be selected individually depending on the 3-D canal configuration of each tooth. Further study is needed to demonstrate the differences made by including variations in the internal anatomy of teeth into the study protocol of clinical RCT for identifying the best preparation technique.The study of dental and root canal morphology is a critical theme in endodontic education, training, and treatment [1-5]. Together with diagnosis and treatment planning, a good knowledge of the root canal system and its frequent variations is an absolute necessity for successful root canal therapy [6] %K Manual instruments %K Microcomputed tomography %K Root canal preparation %K Root canal system %K Three-dimensional imaging %U http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2342/11/14