# Effect of 980 nm diode laser irradiation in comparison with conventional irrigation on smear layer removal from radicular dentin—an in vitro experimental study

**Authors:** Syeda Abeerah Tanveer, Robia Ghafoor, Adil Omerson

PMC · DOI: 10.1038/s41405-026-00409-0 · BDJ Open · 2026-03-02

## TL;DR

This study compares a 980 nm diode laser and traditional irrigation for removing the smear layer in root canals, finding the laser more effective.

## Contribution

The study introduces diode laser irradiation as a novel method for smear layer removal in root canal treatment.

## Key findings

- Diode laser irradiation showed significantly greater dentinal tubule penetration compared to conventional irrigation.
- The laser group had a larger mean area of dye penetration than the conventional group.
- The results suggest improved root canal disinfection potential with diode laser use.

## Abstract

The smear layer in radicular dentin reduces effective disinfection by occluding dentinal tubules and decreasing dentin permeability, contributing to persistent microbial infection and root canal treatment failures.

To compare the effect of 980 nm Diode laser irradiation and conventional irrigation with Sodium hypochlorite and ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (NaOCl +EDTA) on smear layer removal in radicular dentin through dye penetration test.

Sixty-six extracted single-rooted permanent teeth were randomly allocated into two groups. Group I underwent 980 nm diode laser irradiation using a 200 µm fiber in helicoidal motion (2 W power, 200 Hz frequency, 1–4 ms pulse duration). Group II received conventional irrigation with 3% NaOCl followed by 17% EDTA. All specimens were immersed in 2% methylene blue dye for 48 h, after which cross-sections were obtained at 3, 5, and 8 mm from the anatomical apex. Dye penetration diameter (mm) and area (mm²) between the inner and outer circumferences were measured using ImageJ software under a stereomicroscope. Statistical analysis was performed using one-way ANOVA with Bonferroni post-hoc tests.

The diode laser irradiation demonstrated overall significantly greater dentinal tubule penetration (16.2 ± 1.91 mm) compared to the conventional irrigation (5.32 ± 0.70 mm; p = 0.001). The overall mean area of the laser group (12.61 ± 2.02 mm²) was greater as compared to the conventional group (1.67 ± 0.73 mm²; p = 0.001).

Diode laser irradiation may serve as an effective adjunct for smear layer removal and improved root canal disinfection.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** Sodium hypochlorite (PubChem CID 23665760), ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (PubChem CID 6049), methylene blue (PubChem CID 4139)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** root fractures (MESH:D011843), cracks (MESH:D003387), root resorption (MESH:D012391), microbial infection (MESH:D015163), root caries (MESH:D017213), discoloration (MESH:D014075), endodontic infection (MESH:D011671)
- **Chemicals:** EDTA (MESH:D004492), saline (MESH:D012965), thymol (MESH:D013943), water (MESH:D014867), Methylene blue (MESH:D008751), NaOCl (MESH:D012973), hydrogen peroxide (MESH:D006861), Diode (-), ROS (MESH:D017382), calcium (MESH:D002118)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

4 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12953749/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12953749