Specialist microsurgical retrieval of separated endodontic instruments — performed under operating microscope magnification with ultrasonic technique and CBCT-guided access.
A fractured or separated instrument — a small piece of rotary file, reamer or other endodontic instrument that has broken off inside the root canal — is one of the more technically demanding scenarios in endodontics. Leaving the fragment in place can work out well, but in some cases removal is the right call. When it is, it requires specialist training, an operating microscope and ultrasonic instrumentation that is not typically available in general practice.
Modern nickel-titanium rotary instruments are remarkably durable, but they can separate under cyclic fatigue, torsional stress, or when used in highly curved or calcified canals. It is an accepted, low-frequency clinical event — not an error, and not unusual. The important question is what to do next.
Not always. The current endodontic evidence shows that if a fragment separates in a well-cleaned canal with no signs of infection, leaving it in place and obturating around it has a prognosis similar to uncomplicated root canal treatment. The fragment becomes part of the seal.
Removal is generally indicated when:
At Wollongong Endodontics, retrieval is performed under the operating microscope (up to 25× magnification) with specialist ultrasonic tips that carefully trough dentine around the fragment, loosen it, and allow it to be pulled coronally without removing excess healthy dentine.
The sequence is:
Success rates in the hands of a trained specialist are strong — typically 70–90% for accessible fragments, though individual prognosis depends on fragment location, canal curvature, and remaining dentine thickness.
Fragments located beyond the canal curvature, deep in the apical third, or at the apex itself may not be retrievable without removing more dentine than is prudent. In these cases we discuss the options honestly — leave it in place and obturate around it, perform apical surgery to bypass the fragment, or consider extraction with implant planning. We do not compromise the long-term prognosis of the tooth for the sake of removing an asymptomatic fragment.
Retrieval fees are case-dependent due to the variable complexity. Indicative starting fee at Wollongong Endodontics is from $600, with exact quotes provided in writing after the consultation. Retrieval is usually undertaken as part of a broader root canal retreatment, and the combined fee is quoted together.
CBCT 3D imaging is strongly recommended in most retrieval cases. It shows the fragment location in three dimensions, the canal anatomy around it, and the thickness of remaining dentine — all essential for predicting whether retrieval is feasible and how to approach it safely. A 2D X-ray alone often underestimates complexity.
Often, yes — if the consultation and CBCT assessment confirm the fragment is retrievable and you have time available for a longer visit (typically 90–120 minutes). Sometimes the retrieval and retreatment are staged into two visits to allow interappointment medication. Your specialist will confirm the plan at consultation.
If retrieval is not safely possible, the usual fallback is to obturate around the fragment — this is a recognised endodontic approach with good outcomes in the absence of infection. Where the fragment is blocking resolution of persistent infection, apical surgery to bypass it is an alternative. Extraction is reserved for cases where neither option is viable.
South West Sydney patients may prefer our sister practice — Southwest Endodontic Centre, Liverpool →.