Physics Forceps in Tooth Extraction—A Systematic Review of Randomized Controlled Trials
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Criteria for Eligibility
2.2. Methods for Identifying Studies Using Search Engines
2.3. Searches Using Electronic Database
2.4. Reference List
2.5. Data Collection
2.6. Risk of Bias Assessment
- We considered a study to be a low risk of bias if it had a low risk of bias across all domains.
- We considered a study to have an unclear risk of bias if we determined that it had an unclear risk of bias for one or more domains, but no domain was considered high risk.
- We considered a study to be a high risk of bias if it had a high risk of bias in one or more domains.
2.7. Evaluation of Heterogeneity
3. Results
3.1. Study Characteristics
3.2. Risk of Bias in Included Studies
3.2.1. Assessment of Crown Fracture
3.2.2. Assessment of Root Fracture
3.2.3. Assessment of Buccal Bone Plate Fracture
3.2.4. Extraction Time
3.2.5. Gingival Level and Marginal Bone Loss
3.2.6. Post-Operative Pain
3.2.7. Bleeding and Gingival Laceration
3.2.8. Post-Operative Complications
3.2.9. Healing
4. Discussion
5. Quality of Evidence
6. Future Implications
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Author | Year | Reason for Exclusion |
---|---|---|
Maddalone M | 2003 | The scope of the article does not match with the inclusion criteria |
Raghu K | 2020 | No comparison between Physics forceps and conventional forceps |
Author/Year | Country | Study Design | Sample Size | Pre-Operative Status of Tooth | Anesthesia | Extracted Teeth | Intervention | Comparison | Parameter Assessed |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hariharan 2014 | India | Randomized split mouth clinical trial | n = 54 teeth (n = 27 per group) | Healthy tooth indicated for orthodontic extraction | 1.8 mL of 1:200,000 units as Xylocaine | Maxillary premolars | Physics forceps | Universal extraction forceps | Fracture of root, dry socket, healing, pain, post-operative infection |
Kenawy 2015 | India | Randomized clinical trial | n = 200 patients (n = 100 per group) | Teeth indicated for extraction with 3 mm or more of intact tooth structure above the gingival margin | 2% mepivacaine HCL with 1:20,000 levonordefrine | Maxillary and mandibular teeth (Both anterior and posterior) | Physics forceps | Conventional forceps | Crown fractures, buccal bone fractures, fractured roots |
Patel 2016 | India | Randomized split mouth clinical trial | n = 11 patients n = 42 teeth (n = 21 per group) | Healthy tooth indicated for orthodontic extraction | 1:80,000 Lignocaine Hydrochloride & adrenaline | Maxillary and mandibular premolars | Physics forceps | Conventional forceps | Extraction time, root fracture, buccal cortical plate fracture, gingival and marginal bone loss, pain |
Basheer 2017 | India | Randomized clinical trial | n = 100 patients (n = 50 per group) | Teeth indicated for extraction with 3 mm or more of intact tooth structure above the gingival margin | 2% lignocaine with adrenaline | Not mentioned | Physics forceps | Conventional forceps | Fracture of tooth, fracture of buccal cortical plate, gingival laceration, bleeding, pain, healing |
Hasan 2017 | Iraq | Randomized clinical trial | n = 28 teeth (n = 14 per group) | Teeth indicated for extraction, both carious sound and mobile tooth (grade of mobility not mentioned) | 2% lidocaine with 1:100,000 adrenaline | Mandibular teeth from second premolar to premolar | Physics forceps | Conventional forceps | Buccal bone fracture, crown fracture, gingival tearing, root fracture, time of extraction |
Parameter | Author/Year | Assessment Criteria | Time of Assessment | Outcome Assessment |
---|---|---|---|---|
Crown fracture | Hasan et al. | Yes/No | Intraoperative period | No difference |
Hariharan et al. | Yes/No | Intraoperative period | No difference | |
Kenawy et al. | Yes/No | Intraoperative period | Physics forceps were better than conventional forceps | |
Root fracture | Kenawy et al. | Yes/No | Intraoperative period | Physics forceps were better than conventional forceps |
Patel et al. | Yes/No | Intraoperative period | No difference | |
Hasan et al. | Yes/No | Intraoperative period | No difference | |
Hariharan et al. | Yes/No | Intraoperative period | No difference | |
Bone plate fracture | Kenawy et al. | Yes/No | Intraoperative period | No difference |
Patel et al. | Yes/No | Intraoperative period | No difference | |
Hasan et al. | Yes/No | Intraoperative period | No difference | |
Basheer et al. | Yes/No | Intraoperative period | No difference | |
Extraction time | Patel et al. | Stopwatch measured at seconds | Intraoperative period | ±48.13 s, ±37.59 s for Physics forceps and conventional forceps, respectively |
Hasan et al. | Stopwatch measured at minutes | Intraoperative period | 0.38 min, 3.97 min for Physics forceps and conventional forceps, respectively | |
Hariharan et al. | Stopwatch measured at minutes | Intraoperative period | Operating time using Physics forceps was 29.4 s and with the universal extraction forceps 43.5 s | |
Gingival level | Mean difference in the pre- and post-extraction gingival level using Physics forceps and conventional forceps was 0.57 mm and 1.01 mm, respectively | |||
Marginal bone loss | Patel et al. | Williams periodontal probe | At the point of extraction | Mean difference in the pre- and post-extraction bone level using Physics forceps and conventional forceps was 1.26 mm and 1.87 mm |
Post-operative pain | Hariharan et al. | 10-point VAS | 1, 3 and 7th day | Physics forceps had significantly less pain on the first post-operative day than the other group |
Patel et al. | VAS scale (Not specified) | 1 and 3rd day | Difference in pain score using either forceps was not statistically significant | |
Basheer et al. | 10-point VAS | Up to 7th day | On 1st & 2nd day Physics forceps showed a significant reduction in pain. | |
Bleeding | Basheer et al. | 3-point VAS (0 representing minimal bleeding and 3 indicating continuous low bleeding) | 5th day | Physics forceps were better than conventional forceps |
Gingival laceration | Basheer et al. | Yes/No | Until 5th day | No difference |
Dry socket | Hariharan et al. | Yes/No | 1, 3, 7 and 21 days | No difference |
Post-operative infections (redness, swelling, pus discharge) | Hariharan et al. | Yes/No | 1, 3, 7 and 21 days | No difference |
Healing | Hariharan et al. | Method of assessment not mentioned | 1, 3, 7 and 21 days | No difference |
Basheer et al. | Healing of the extraction sockets were evaluated on 7th day using a 5-point VAS scale (0 representing normally pink, non-edematous and 5 representing dry socket) | 7th day | Physics forceps were better than conventional forceps |
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Janani, K.; Teja, K.V.; Alam, M.K.; Nagy, A.I.; Basheer, S.A.; Srivastava, K.C.; Hosni, H.A.; Jose, J.; Shrivastava, D. Physics Forceps in Tooth Extraction—A Systematic Review of Randomized Controlled Trials. Appl. Sci. 2022, 12, 254. https://doi.org/10.3390/app12010254
Janani K, Teja KV, Alam MK, Nagy AI, Basheer SA, Srivastava KC, Hosni HA, Jose J, Shrivastava D. Physics Forceps in Tooth Extraction—A Systematic Review of Randomized Controlled Trials. Applied Sciences. 2022; 12(1):254. https://doi.org/10.3390/app12010254
Chicago/Turabian StyleJanani, Krishnamachari, Kavalipurapu Venkata Teja, Mohammad Khursheed Alam, Ahmed Ismail Nagy, Sulphi Abdul Basheer, Kumar Chandan Srivastava, Hala A. Hosni, Jerry Jose, and Deepti Shrivastava. 2022. "Physics Forceps in Tooth Extraction—A Systematic Review of Randomized Controlled Trials" Applied Sciences 12, no. 1: 254. https://doi.org/10.3390/app12010254
APA StyleJanani, K., Teja, K. V., Alam, M. K., Nagy, A. I., Basheer, S. A., Srivastava, K. C., Hosni, H. A., Jose, J., & Shrivastava, D. (2022). Physics Forceps in Tooth Extraction—A Systematic Review of Randomized Controlled Trials. Applied Sciences, 12(1), 254. https://doi.org/10.3390/app12010254