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KMID : 0358919960230030631
Journal of the Korean Academy of Pedodontics
1996 Volume.23 No. 3 p.631 ~ p.639
Electrosurgery in dental practice: A case report




Abstract
Electrosurgical technique have been used in dentistry as an aid to soft tissue management for nearly 60 years. However, it was not until the late 1960s that the principles of electrosurgery were understood and improved equipment became available.
Electrosurgery is a surgical procedure performed on soft tissue utilizing controlled high frequency electrical(radio-frequency) currents in the range of 1,5000,000 to 7,5000,000 cycles-per second. The radio-frequency energy used in electrosurgery
is
able to cut and coagulate tissue because it focuses the energy at the small, active electrode.
Advantages of electrosurgery for soft-tissue management during dental procedures include improved hemostasis, ease of tissue modification, improved visibility and so on, but adverse healing responses - including necrosis of soft tissue and
sequestration
of alveolar bone-have been reported.
The present report provides examples of treatment of soft tissue and pulp tissue of primary teeth by electrosurgery.
@ES The results are as follows ;
@EN 1. Electrosurgical techniques can be used for various procedures in pedodontics.
2. Electrosurgical procedures provide improved hemostasis and visibility in the operating field, which enable to remove, reshape, and contour soft tissues easily.
3. In pulpotomy technique, it was difficult to expect the variable pulpal response based on the degree of heat accumulation and the conditions of pulp tissues. Therefore, electrosurgical pulpotomy could not be considered as a method superior to
formocresol pulpotomy.
4. A greater degree of dexterity and experiences in manipulation of the electrode is required compared with the conventional scalpel surgery.
KEYWORD
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