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The top 10 most-cited articles on the management of fractured instruments: a bibliometric analysis

Restorative Dentistry & Endodontics 2019³â 44±Ç 1È£ p.2 ~ 2
Mishra Lora, ±èÇöö, Singh Naomi Ranjan, Rath Priti Pragati,
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 ( Mishra Lora ) - S¡¯O¡¯A University Institute of Dental Sciences Department of Conservative Dentistry and Endodontics
±èÇöö ( Kim Hyeon-Cheol ) - Pusan National University School of Dentistry Department of Conservative Dentistry
 ( Singh Naomi Ranjan ) - S¡¯O¡¯A University Institute of Dental Sciences Department of Conservative Dentistry and Endodontics
 ( Rath Priti Pragati ) - University of Hong Kong Faculty of Dentistry Discipline of Endodontology

Abstract


Objectives: The purpose of this research was to identify the top 10 most-cited articles on the management of fractured or broken instruments and to perform a bibliometric analysis thereof.

Materials and Methods: Published articles related to fractured instruments were screened from online databases, such as Web of Science, Scopus, PubMed, and ScienceDirect, and highly cited papers, with at least 50 citations since publication, were identified. The most-cited articles were selected and analysed with regard to publication title, authorship, the journal of publication, year, institution, country of origin, article type, and number of citations.

Results: The top 10 most-cited articles were from various journals. Most were published in the Journal of Endodontics, followed by the International Endodontic Journal, and Dental Traumatology. The leading countries were Australia, Israel, Switzerland, the USA, and Germany, and the leading institution was the University of Melbourne. The majority of articles among the top 10 articles were clinical research studies (n = 8), followed by a basic research article and a non-systematic review article.

Conclusions: This bibliometric analysis revealed interesting information about scientific progress in endodontics regarding fractured instruments. Overall, clinical research studies and basic research articles published in high-impact endodontic journals had the highest citation rates.

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File fracture; Instrumentation; Nickel-titanium files; Root canal preparations; Root canal treatment

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