RESUMO
Five teeth extracted after chemomechanical preparation (group A) and 11 extracted 1 to 7 yr after endodontic treatment (group B) were selected for this study. A 1% NaOCl was used for irrigations and a lateral condensation technique with a Grossman-type sealer was used for obturation. The teeth were fractured and prepared for and viewed by a scanning electron microscope equipped with an electron dispersive spectrometer. All root canal walls of group A were covered with a thick smear layer. Sealer, either rod-like or granular in appearance and barium free, was present in the majority of the dentinal tubules of group B usually at a distance up to 200 microns from the root canal walls; in two cases up to 900 microns. Sealer was found deepest in the middle third of the root. The smear layer did not stop sealer from entering the dentinal tubules. The differences in the depth of penetration or in the appearance of the sealer cannot be attributed to the different time periods the teeth remained in the arch after endodontic treatment.