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Article Abstract

Objective: This study investigated the morphology of accessory canals in the mandibular first molar of a Malaysian subpopulation.

Methods: A total of 140 mandibular first molars were scanned using micro-computed tomography. The accessory canals for each of the mesial and distal roots were classified according to Ahmed et al. system based on location (coronal, middle and apical thirds) and type (patent, blind, loop and delta). A total of thirty mandibular first molar teeth were used for calibration. The Chi-square and Chi-square goodness-fit tests were used to assess the association between the categorical variables. The significance was set at 0.05 (p<0.05).

Results: Results showed that the prevalence of accessory canal is 80.71%. The apical third was the most common location for accessory canals in the mesial (79.3%) and distal (75.9%) roots (p<0.001). Amongst accessory canal types, the patent type was the most common (76.43% and 71.43%, respectively) with the codes of M(A1), D(A1). No significant association was found between root type and the presence of the accessory canals (p=0.071). A significant difference was found in the type of accessory canals and the location within the root (p<0.001).

Conclusion: In this population, the mandibular first molars showed a high prevalence of accessory canals in the mesial and distal roots. Patent accessory canals in the apical third are the most common in both roots followed by apical delta. (EEJ-2024-10-163).

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12102767PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.14744/eej.2025.00922DOI Listing

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