Cohens Chapters 21, 22, 23, 25, 29 Flashcards
According to Cohens Chapter 21, Periradicular surgery,
What is the primary goal of both conventional snd surgical root canal treatment?
Sealing off all potential routes of microbial escape from the root canal system is the goal of both nonsurgical and surgical treatmen
According to Cohens Chapter 21, Periradicular surgery,
What new agents have been implicated in cases of RCT failure?
•Fungi and viruses recently have also emerged as potential causes of root canal failure and may play either a primary or secondary role in persistent periradicular pathosis
According to Cohens Chapter 21, Periradicular surgery,
How successful is surgical endodontic treatrment?
•current evidence supports the contention that the prognosis for surgical treatment is approximately the same as that for nonsurgical retreatment
According to Cohens Chapter 21, Periradicular surgery,
What are the three main phases of healing?
hemotasis/inflammatory phase
proliferation phase
maturation/remodelling phase
According to Cohens Chapter 21, Periradicular surgery,
What cells predominate in the early inflammatory phase, what is the timeline for arrival and what is their funciton?
Neutrophils
begin showing up after 6 hours, peak at 24-48 hours
role is decontamination by phagocytosis of bacteria
According to Cohens Chapter 21, Periradicular surgery,
What cells predominate in the late inflammatory phase, what is the timeline for arrival and what is their funciton?
macrophages
after 48 hours, usually peak by 3-4 days
phagocytosis of bacteria and tissue debris
process and present antigen to T cells,
secrete an array of cytokines
According to Cohens Chapter 21, Periradicular surgery,
What 2 cell tyes are most important in the proliferative phase?
fibroblasts
endothelial cells
According to Cohens Chapter 21, Periradicular surgery,
During the proliferative phase, what type of tissue is formed in the wound?
granulation tissue
According to Cohens Chapter 21, Periradicular surgery,
in the proliferative phase of wound healing, Where do fibroblasts come from?
Undifferentiated ectomesenchymal cells in the perivascular tissue and fibroblasts in the adjacent connective tissue migrate into the wound
According to Cohens Chapter 21, Periradicular surgery,
in the proliferative phase of wound healing, what is the timeline for arrival of fibroblasts?
begin after 3 days, peak after 7 days
According to Cohens Chapter 21, Periradicular surgery,
in the proliferative phase of wound healing, which cytokines stimulate arrival of fibroblasts?
fibroblast growth factor [FGF],
insulin-like growth factor 1 [IGF-1],
platelet-derived growth factor [PDGF]
According to Cohens Chapter 21, Periradicular surgery,
in the proliferative phase of wound healing, what is the most important action of fibroblasts?
produce most of the structural proteins (collagen) involved in wound healing
According to Cohens Chapter 21, Periradicular surgery,
in the proliferative phase of wound healing, what do fibroblasts produce first, what comes as the wound matures?
type III collagen made first, type I made later
According to Cohens Chapter 21, Periradicular surgery,
in the proliferative phase of wound healing, what special type of fibroblasts are involved in contraction and drawing wound edges together?
myofibroblast
According to Cohens Chapter 21, Periradicular surgery,
in the proliferation phase of wound healing, when does angiogenesis begin?
48-72 hours after injury
According to Cohens Chapter 21, Periradicular surgery,
Name 5 factors that stimulate endothelial growth
All the cytokines!
- low oxygen tension
- vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF),
- basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF),
- acidic FGF (aFGF),
- transforming growth factors alpha and beta (TGF-α, TGF-β),
- epidermal growth factor (EGF),
- interleukin 1 (IL-1),
- tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α),
- lactic acid
According to Cohens Chapter 21, Periradicular surgery,
how quickly does epithelium spread across a wound?
0.5-1mm/day
According to Cohens Chapter 21, Periradicular surgery,
What tells epithelial cells to stop spreading?
contact inhibition from opposite side
According to Cohens Chapter 21, Periradicular surgery,
in primary wound healing, how long does it take to achieve an epithelial seal?
21-28 hours after closure
According to Cohens Chapter 21, Periradicular surgery,
Under ideal conditions when does the wound maturation phase begin?
5-7 days after injury
According to Cohens Chapter 21, Periradicular surgery,
what are the key events hapenning during the wound maturation phase?
- reduction in fibroblasts, vascular channels, and extracellular fluids
- upregulation of collagen fibrogenesis occurs
- collagen gradually reorganizes; this requires degradation and reaggregation of the collagen
According to Cohens Chapter 21, Periradicular surgery,
In wound healing, what is the difference between an epithelial seal and an epithelial barrier?
seal is when there is a single complete layer of epithelial cells covering the wound
barrier is after seal undergoes mitosis and re-established a stratified squamous layer
According to Cohens Chapter 21, Periradicular surgery,
In wound healing, how long does it take for an epithelial barrier to appear in primary intention wound healing?
36-42 hours
According to Cohens Chapter 21, Periradicular surgery,
when an osseous wound is made, how long before new bone formation BEGINS?
approx 6 days
According to Cohens Chapter 21, Periradicular surgery,
when an defect is made, how long before new bone formation typically fills the defect?
16 weeks
(remodelling of the cortical plate will take longer)
According to Cohens Chapter 21, Periradicular surgery,
when root end resection is performed, when will cementogenesis begin?
after 10-12 days