Descriptive terminology Flashcards

1
Q

what is descriptive terminology?

A

terms used to describe the appearance, location and size of a lesion
- this information should be documented for all lesions viewed on dental images

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2
Q

why do we use descriptive terminology?

A
  • allows dental professionals to describe and discuss what is seen on a dental radiograph intelligently and to communicate using a common language
  • eliminates the chance for miscommunication amongst dental professionals
  • allows for legal documentation that dental images were reviewed
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3
Q

descriptive terminology vs diagnosis

A
  • descriptive terminology allows the dental hygienist to describe what is seen on a radiograph without implying a diagnosis
  • the patient’s medical and dental history, clinical findings, signs and symptoms, laboratory tests, and biopsy results all contribute for aiding the dentist to make a definitive diagnosis
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4
Q

Radiograph vs x-ray

A
  • radiograph is an image that is produced on photosensitive film by exposing the film to x-rays and then processing the film so that a negative is produced
  • x-ray is a beam of energy that has the power to penetrate substances and to record shadow images on photographic film
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5
Q

radiolucent vs radiopaque

A
  • radiolucent: the portion of a processed radiograph that is dark or black
  • radiopaque: the portion of a processed radiograph that appears light or white
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6
Q

3 terms used to describe radiolucent lesions

A
  • appearance
  • location
  • size
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7
Q

what is a unilocular radiolucent lesion?

A
  • one compartment
  • tend to be small and nonexpansive
  • have borders that may appear corticated or noncorticated on radiograph
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8
Q

what is a unilocular lesion with corticated borders?

A
  • the lesion exhibits a thin, well-demarcated radiopaque rim of bone at the periphery
  • usually indicative of a benign, slow-growing process
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9
Q

what is a unilocular lesion with noncorticated borders?

A
  • the lesions does not exhibit a thin radiopaque rim of bone at the periphery
  • the periphery appears fuzzy or poorly defined
  • may represent either a benign or malignant process
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10
Q

what is a multilocular radiolucent lesion?

A
  • a lesion that exhibits multiple radiolucent compartments
  • frequently expansive
  • typically benign lesions with aggressive growth potential
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11
Q

where can radiolucent lesions occur?

A

may appear in a periapical, inter-radicular, edentulous or pericoronal locations
- may appear as alveolar bone loss (i.e. periodontitis)

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12
Q

what is a periapical location for a radiolucent lesion?

A

a lesion located around the apex of a tooth (ex. periapical cyst)

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13
Q

what is an inter-radicular location for a radiolucent lesion?

A

a lesion located between the roots of adjacent teeth (ex. lateral periodontal cyst)

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14
Q

what is an edentulous zone location for a radiolucent lesion?

A

a lesion located in an area without teeth

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15
Q

what is a pericoronal location for a radiolucent lesion?

A
  • a radiolucent lesion located around the crown of an impacted tooth (ex. dentigerous cyst)
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16
Q

what is alveolar bone loss for a radiolucent lesion?

A

loss of bone in the mandible or maxilla that surrounds and supports the teeth (appears radiolucent such as periodontitis)

17
Q

define size for a radiolucent lesion

A

can vary in size from several millimetres in diameter to several centimetres in diameter. can be measure on a radiograph with a millimetre ruler

18
Q

appearances of radiopaque lesions

A
  • can be described as focal opacity, target lesion, multifocal confluent, irregular, ground glass, or mixed Lucent-opaque
  • radiopaque lesions occur not only in bone but in soft tissue as well
  • more detail in oral pathology